d0bc64 No.24599623 [Last 50 Posts]
Welcome To Q Research AUSTRALIA
A new thread for research and discussion of Australia's role in The Great Awakening.
Previous thread
>>24354649 Q Research AUSTRALIA #45
Q's Posts made on Q Research AUSTRALIA threads
Wednesday 11.20.2019
>>7358352 ————————————–——– These people are stupid.
>>7358338 ————————————–——– All assets [F + D] being deployed.
>>7358318 ————————————–——– What happens when the PUBLIC discovers the TRUTH [magnitude] re: [D] party corruption?
Tuesday 11.19.2019
>>7357790 ————————————–——– FISA goes both ways.
Saturday 11.16.2019
>>7356270 ————————————–——– There is no escaping God.
>>7356265 ————————————–——– The Harvest [crop] has been prepared and soon will be delivered to the public for consumption.
Friday 11.15.2019
>>7356017 ————————————–——– "Whistle Blower Traps" [Mar 4 2018] 'Trap' keyword select provided…..
Thursday 03.28.2019
>>5945210 ————————————–——– Sometimes our 'sniffer' picks and pulls w/o applying credit file
>>5945074 ————————————–——– We LOVE you!
>>5944970 ————————————–——– USA v. LifeLog?
>>5944908 ————————————–——– It is an embarrassment to our Nation!
>>5944859 ————————————–——– 'Knowingly'
Q's Posts referencing Australia
https://qanon.pub/?q=AUS
https://qanon.pub/?q=australia
https://qanon.pub/?q=koala
https://qanon.pub/?q=HouseOfCards
https://qanon.pub/?q=boomerang
https://qanon.pub/?q=45HarisonHarold
https://qanon.pub/?q=6572656
https://qanon.pub/?q=RAT%20BAIT
https://qanon.pub/?q=VERY%20important
https://qanon.pub/?q=remain%20in%20the%20light
https://qanon.pub/?q=news.com.au
Q's Posts referencing Australian citizens
Malcolm Turnbull (X/AUS)
Former Prime Minister of Australia, 2015 to 2018
https://qanon.pub/?q=X%2FAUS
https://qanon.pub/?q=call%20details
https://qanon.pub/?q=Threat%20to%20AUS
https://qanon.pub/#819
Alexander Downer
Former Australian Liberal Party politician and former Australian High Commissioner to the United Kingdom
https://qanon.pub/?q=Downer
Cardinal George Pell
Australian Cardinal of the Catholic Church and former Prefect of the Vatican Secretariat for the Economy
https://qanon.pub/?q=Pell
https://qanon.pub/?q=cardinal-george-pell
https://qanon.pub/?q=pecking
Julian Assange
Australian activist, founder, editor and publisher of WikiLeaks
https://qanon.pub/?q=assange
https://qanon.pub/?q=JA
https://qanon.pub/?q=Under%20protection
https://qanon.pub/?q=WL
https://qanon.pub/?q=wikileaks
https://qanon.pub/?q=crowdstrike
https://qanon.pub/?q=server
https://qanon.pub/?q=Seth
https://qanon.pub/?q=SR
https://qalerts.app/?q=snowden
https://qalerts.app/?q=roadmap
Virginia Roberts Giuffre
American-Australian survivor of the sex trafficking ring operated by Jeffrey Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell
https://qanon.pub/#4568
https://qanon.pub/#4728
https://qanon.pub/#1054
https://qanon.pub/?q=chandler
https://qanon.pub/?q=epstein
https://qanon.pub/?q=island
https://qanon.pub/#1001
https://qanon.pub/#1861
https://qanon.pub/#3145
https://qanon.pub/#3147
https://qanon.pub/#4578
https://qanon.pub/#3432
https://qanon.pub/#3497
https://qanon.pub/#4727
https://qanon.pub/#4797
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https://qanon.pub/#4576
https://qanon.pub/#4577
https://qanon.pub/?q=maxwell
https://qanon.pub/#4569
https://qanon.pub/?q=spacey
https://qanon.pub/#4570
https://qanon.pub/?q=normalize
https://qanon.pub/?q=Prince%20Andrew
https://qanon.pub/#4579
https://qanon.pub/#4907
https://qanon.pub/#4911
https://qanon.pub/#4921
https://qanon.pub/?q=Welcome%20aboard.
https://qanon.pub/?q=dershowitz
https://qanon.pub/?q=Dearest%20Virginia
Q's Posts referencing The Five Eyes intelligence alliance (FVEY)
An anglophone intelligence alliance comprising Australia, Canada, New Zealand, the United Kingdom and the United States
https://qanon.pub/?q=FVEY
https://qanon.pub/?q=Five%20Eyes
https://qanon.pub/?q=Interesting%2C
https://qanon.pub/?q=RAT%20BAIT
"Does AUS stand w/ the US or only select divisions within the US?"
Q
Nov 25 2018
https://qanon.pub/#2501
____________________________
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d0bc64 No.24599625
Notables
are not endorsements
#45 - Part 1
Middle East Conflict - The Australian Perspective - Part 1
>>24359209 Government considering request for military assistance from Gulf States attacked by Iran - Australia is considering requests from Persian Gulf states for defensive military support after Iranian drone and missile strikes targeted civilian infrastructure across the region during the second week of the Middle East war. Australian Foreign Minister Penny Wong said several countries had sought help to protect against attacks but stressed Australia would not take part in offensive operations against Iran. Options under consideration include deploying a small Australian Defence Force detachment with NASAMS (National Advanced Surface-to-Air Missile System) to protect key infrastructure, according to defence analyst Malcolm Davis. Meanwhile about 11,000 Australians stranded in the region have registered with the Department of Foreign Affairs seeking assistance to return home as flights resume from Dubai following an Iranian drone strike.
>>24363854 Aussie, Aussie, Aussie’: Cheers after five Iranian players granted asylum after escape - (Video) Five Iranian women’s footballers, including captain Zahra Ghanbari, have been granted humanitarian visas to remain in Australia after escaping government minders at a Gold Coast hotel during the Women’s Asian Cup. Home Affairs Minister Tony Burke said the players fled on Monday night following days of confidential discussions with officials and were now under the protection of the Australian Federal Police. The athletes had faced condemnation in Iran after refusing to sing the national anthem before their opening match, raising fears they could face severe punishment if forced to return. Burke said the remaining members of the team would also be offered assistance if they sought to stay. The incident drew international attention, with US President Donald Trump contacting Prime Minister Anthony Albanese and urging Australia to grant the players asylum.
>>24363902 Tony Burke grants five Iranian footballers asylum as two players stay behind at team’s hotel - (Video) Five members of Iran’s women’s national football team, including captain Zahra Ghanbari, have been granted humanitarian visas after escaping team minders at a Gold Coast hotel during the Women’s Asian Cup. Home Affairs Minister Tony Burke said the players fled on Monday night with assistance from the Australian Federal Police and are now being housed at a secure location in Brisbane. Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said the government had been preparing for possible defections and assured remaining team members that help would be available if they sought asylum. Two additional players reportedly remained at the team’s hotel as the squad prepared to depart Australia. The dramatic escape drew international attention, with US President Donald Trump speaking with Albanese and urging Australia to ensure the players were not forced to return to Iran.
>>24363915 Australia deploys aircraft to Middle East as analyst warns ‘we’re now part of this war’ - (Video) Australia will deploy an E-7A Wedgetail surveillance aircraft, advanced air-to-air missiles and about 85 troops to the United Arab Emirates after the Gulf state requested assistance following Iranian missile and drone attacks. Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said the deployment would focus on defensive operations, including protecting airspace and supporting Australian citizens and facilities in the region. Defence analyst Michael Shoebridge warned the move effectively tied Australia more closely to the conflict, saying “we’re now a part of this war”. The government said the Wedgetail would provide long-range reconnaissance for an initial four-week mission. Officials also noted around 24,000 Australians remain in the UAE as the conflict disrupts flights and escalates what Foreign Minister Penny Wong has described as Australia’s worst-ever consular crisis.
>>24363919 No need for panic’: Bowen calls urgent summit as fuel fears grip regions - Energy Minister Chris Bowen has convened an urgent fuel security taskforce as panic-buying and supply concerns spread through regional Australia amid rising oil prices and conflict in the Middle East. Bowen said there was “no need for panic”, stressing that shipments of diesel, petrol and jet fuel to Australia had not been disrupted and that the country held roughly a month of fuel reserves. The taskforce, including farming groups, fuel suppliers and ministers Tim Ayres and Julie Collins, will examine supply chain pressures and reports of hoarding. Farmers warned fuel and fertiliser shortages could threaten upcoming winter crop planting, while the Coalition urged the government to intervene to guarantee distribution. Oil markets have been volatile as tanker traffic through the Strait of Hormuz, a key route for global supply, faces disruption.
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d0bc64 No.24599626
#45 - Part 2
Middle East Conflict - The Australian Perspective - Part 2
>>24367769 Squad member granted asylum reverses decision as Iran claims players ‘kidnapped’ - (Video) One member of Iran’s women’s football team who accepted an Australian offer of asylum has reversed her decision and chosen to return to Iran, Home Affairs Minister Tony Burke confirmed, after speaking with teammates who had already left the country. Burke said Australia respected the player’s right to change her mind and confirmed authorities had immediately moved other asylum seekers to a new secure location after the Iranian embassy was informed of their whereabouts. Iranian officials accused Australia of taking the players “hostage”, claims rejected by the government. Six members of the squad, including five players who earlier escaped team minders on the Gold Coast, have sought asylum in Australia. Most of the remaining team departed on Tuesday night amid emotional scenes at the hotel and airport, with supporters protesting and police maintaining a strong presence while Department of Home Affairs officials and Australian Border Force officers ensured players could privately consider asylum options.
>>24367805 Home Affairs Minister to halt entry of temporary visa holders who may seek asylum to Australia - (Video) The Albanese government has introduced legislation allowing the Home Affairs Minister to temporarily block certain visa holders from travelling to Australia if authorities believe they may seek asylum after arrival. Assistant Multicultural Affairs Minister Julian Hill said the power would allow the government to respond quickly to international crises and prevent large groups of visitors entering on temporary visas before claiming protection. The proposed law would permit travel suspensions for specific visa cohorts for up to six months without cancelling visas outright. Critics, including Greens Senator David Shoebridge and independent Zali Steggall, warned the measure could concentrate excessive ministerial power and undermine confidence in Australia’s visa system.
>>24367820 Hundreds more Australians return as Gulf repatriation effort gathers pace - More than 2600 Australians stranded in the Middle East have returned home as repatriation efforts accelerate following the conflict sparked by US and Israeli strikes on Iran. A further 160 Australians arrived in Sydney on Tuesday aboard an Emirates flight from Dubai, bringing the total number of repatriation flights to 18. Foreign Minister Penny Wong said officials had been working “around the clock” to assist Australians and urged those wishing to leave the region to take available commercial flights while they remained operating. Several more flights are expected to arrive on Wednesday. Some evacuees criticised the level of assistance provided while stranded, with travellers describing cancelled flights, drone attacks near airports and costly alternative routes through Saudi Arabia to reach flights home.
>>24367825 Mastermind jailed for antisemitic firebombings ordered by overseas group to divide communities - A Sydney man who coordinated a series of antisemitic firebombings and vandalism attacks has been jailed for five years after a court found he acted on instructions from unidentified overseas figures seeking to inflame tensions between Jewish and Arab communities. Nicholas James Alexander, 32, was sentenced in the Downing Centre Local Court after pleading guilty to organising attacks including the firebombing of a Maroubra childcare centre, swastika graffiti at the Newtown Synagogue and arson targeting the former home of Executive Council of Australian Jewry co-chief executive Alex Ryvchin. Magistrate Jennifer Atkinson said Alexander was the “dominant figure” locally but had been directed by a foreign criminal group. The court heard he organised weapons, stolen vehicles and payments to accomplices while relaying instructions from overseas handlers.
>>24379374 Top Iranian diplomat defected, received asylum in secret escape - Iran’s second most senior diplomat in Australia, Mohammad Pournajaf, secretly defected and was granted asylum in Australia in 2023, a development only now revealed. Pournajaf, formerly charge d’affaires at Iran’s embassy in Canberra, applied for protection before the current Middle East conflict and was granted permanent residency, according to government sources. Members of Australia’s Iranian diaspora said he had been assisting anti-regime activists prior to seeking refuge, though others were unaware of his defection. The disclosure comes amid heightened scrutiny of Iranian officials in Australia following recent unrest and the defection of members of the Iranian women’s football team. The government last year expelled Iran’s ambassador after intelligence findings linked Tehran to attacks on Jewish targets in Australia.
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d0bc64 No.24599627
#45 - Part 3
Middle East Conflict - The Australian Perspective - Part 3
>>24379388 Australia taps fuel stockpile in urgent bid to fill shortages and stem panic buying - (Video) The Albanese government will release about 760 million litres of fuel from national reserves in an unprecedented move to ease shortages and curb panic buying as the Middle East conflict disrupts global oil supply. Energy Minister Chris Bowen said the release, equal to about six days’ supply, aims to stabilise distribution networks strained by surging demand, particularly in regional areas. Fuel prices have risen to around $2.20 a litre, with warnings they could exceed $3 if shipping through the Strait of Hormuz remains blocked. Bowen urged motorists to avoid stockpiling, while ruling out immediate rationing or fuel excise cuts. Critics argue Australia remains vulnerable after years of underinvestment in fuel security, with heavy reliance on imports and limited domestic refining capacity.
>>24382751 3 Iranian soccer players abandon Australia asylum bid to return home - (Video) Three Iranian women’s football team members who had sought refuge in Australia have abandoned their asylum bids and left for Malaysia to rejoin the squad, amid claims a staff member helped persuade them to return. Iranian-Australian activist Tina Kordrostami said technical staffer Zahra Meshkinkar had acted as “a mouthpiece for the regime” and “was there the whole time to convince the girls to go back”. Home Affairs Minister Tony Burke said the government had provided “multiple opportunities” and “genuine choices” but could not remove the pressure surrounding the players’ decisions. Iranian state-aligned media cast the reversal as a rejection of the West, declaring the women were returning to the “warm embrace” of home. Concerns remain that the final three players still on humanitarian visas, including captain Zahra Ghanbari, may also decide to leave Australia.
>>24382789 Three more Iranian soccer team members return home, amid fears of group infiltration - (Video) Three more members of Iran’s women’s football delegation who had sought asylum in Australia have reversed course and left to rejoin the team, shrinking the number still seeking refuge and deepening fears of regime pressure. Home Affairs Minister Tony Burke said the women were given “repeated chances” to discuss their options, but the government could not remove the surrounding pressure. Iranian-Australian activists Tina Kordrostami and Sara Rafiee said community members feared a support staff member may have been used to influence players from within, though a government source said all asylum recipients were “thoroughly vetted” and no infiltrator claim had been established. Tasnim News Agency framed the departures as a patriotic rejection of Australia’s offer, while diaspora leaders warned threats to families may drive further reversals.
>>24382832 Obedient and stupid’: Iran blasts Australia as three soccer players reverse asylum claim - Three more members of Iran’s women’s football delegation who had sought asylum in Australia have withdrawn their claims and opted to return, as Iranian state-linked media hailed the move and lashed Australia as an “obedient and stupid” actor in Donald Trump’s orbit. Home Affairs Minister Tony Burke said the women were given repeated chances to discuss their options, but the government could not remove the wider pressures shaping their decisions. Reports from Iran International and Australian-Iranian community groups raised fears that technical staff member Zahra Meshkinkar may have relayed regime messages from inside the safe house, though Iranian officials denied coercion and instead accused Australia of interference. Supporters said some players feared for relatives in Iran, with one message reportedly stating: “They have all of our families hostage in Iran.”
>>24386719 Everything will be fine’: Iranian player poses at Brisbane waterfront as captain flies home - (Video) Iran captain Zahra Ghanbari has abandoned her asylum claim and left Australia, while teammate Fatemeh Pasandideh posted from Brisbane that “everything will be fine”, underlining how rapidly the number of defectors has fallen. Five delegation members have now reversed decisions to stay, amid fears from Iranian-Australian activists that Tehran is pressuring players through threats against relatives and possible promises of rewards. Former Iranian player Shiva Amini said authorities had targeted Ghanbari’s family, including her mother after her father’s death. Activists Tina Kordrostami and Sara Rafiee also raised concerns that technical staffer Zahra Soltan Meshkehkar may have influenced players to return, though a government source said those granted asylum had been vetted and no infiltration had been established. Home Affairs Minister Tony Burke said returnees were repeatedly offered chances to discuss their options.
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d0bc64 No.24599628
#45 - Part 4
Middle East Conflict - The Australian Perspective - Part 4
>>24386729 Dire strait: No ships for Trump’s mission from Australia’s shrinking fleet - Australia has ruled out sending a warship to the Strait of Hormuz, with Transport Minister Catherine King saying it “won’t be sending a ship” even if asked, as attention turns to the Royal Australian Navy’s shrinking surface fleet. The report says the navy will fall to nine surface combatants by year’s end, with HMAS Arunta due to be decommissioned before a replacement arrives in 2029, leaving Australia with limited capacity to support any United States-led coalition. Opposition defence spokesman James Paterson said any formal request would have to be weighed against Australia’s national interests, while reiterating that the country’s “primary focus remains the Indo-Pacific”.
>>24391111 Grace Tame sparks outrage by saying Hamas October 7 terror attack rapes were ‘debunked’ - (Video) Israel’s embassy in Australia has condemned former Australian of the Year Grace Tame after she described claims of sexual violence by Hamas during the October 7 attacks as “propaganda” that had been “debunked” in an ABC Radio Sydney interview. The embassy said Tame had “lost [her] moral compass”, while Executive Council of Australian Jewry head of legal Simone Abel said she had engaged in “the ultimate stonewalling” by denying sexual violence recognised by United Nations bodies. The National Council of Jewish Women Australia also criticised Tame’s remarks, saying claims the allegations had been “debunked” ignored extensive evidence gathered by international bodies, survivor testimony and investigations into the October 7 attacks. Tame said she did “not support any of it” and was “outraged by all of the violence”.
>>24391128 Remaining Iranian soccer players join A-League training - Iran’s women’s team has left Malaysia for Oman after days of uncertainty, while the two remaining players seeking asylum in Australia joined Brisbane Roar for training. Fatemeh Pasandideh and Atefeh Ramezanisadeh were photographed at the A-League Women session in Brisbane, with chief executive Kaz Patafta saying the club was providing a “supportive environment” as they navigated “the next stages”. The departure of the rest of the squad followed the reversal of five asylum claims in Australia and their reunion with teammates in Kuala Lumpur before flying on. Asian Football Confederation general secretary Windsor John said officials would monitor the players’ welfare with Iran’s federation and said they “didn’t look afraid”, while Assistant Immigration Minister Matt Thistlethwaite described the case as a “very complex situation”.
>>24395475 Winston Peters warns Australia and NZ made ‘serious mistakes’ on fuel security - New Zealand Foreign Minister Winston Peters says Australia and New Zealand made “serious mistakes” on fuel security by allowing refineries to close and being “far too cocky” about global stability before the Iran war disrupted oil flows through the Strait of Hormuz. Peters said both countries should have maintained stronger contingency planning, with New Zealand holding about 52 days of fuel supply and Australia about 30. He urged Canberra and Wellington to keep “cool heads” over United States requests for support, saying they should consult closely “before we jump in and make a mistake”. Defence Minister Richard Marles meanwhile said targeting data gathered by Australia’s E-7A Wedgetail in the Gulf was being processed through the United States-led air operations centre, while reiterating Australia was “not contemplating sending a ship”.
>>24395481 PM warns Australians are stockpiling petrol causing shortages that shouldn’t exist - Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has urged motorists not to panic buy petrol, warning that stockpiling is creating shortages “that shouldn’t occur” and putting unnecessary pressure on supplies despite fuel continuing to arrive as scheduled. Albanese said Australians should “just take what you need, be sensible”, while insisting the country still had fuel security. He also warned service stations against profiteering, saying the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission would act against “inappropriate behaviour” and that penalties had been increased. The intervention came as major fuel companies and retailers were called to an emergency meeting with the regulator over price rises and supply concerns, and after Deputy Prime Minister Richard Marles declined to rule out rationing if the conflict driving market disruption were to continue.
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d0bc64 No.24599629
#45 - Part 5
Middle East Conflict - The Australian Perspective - Part 5
>>24395485 Emergency National Cabinet meeting called over fuel supply - (Video) Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has called an emergency National Cabinet meeting for Thursday to coordinate Australia’s fuel response as Middle East conflict disrupts supply chains and adds pressure to regional deliveries. Albanese said leaders from every state and territory would take part virtually and would be asked to nominate a contact to work with the Commonwealth on fuel supply issues. He said the government was responding by releasing 20 per cent of the baseline Minimum Stockholding Obligation for petrol and diesel, temporarily amending fuel standards to boost local supply, and working with industry to direct fuel where it is needed most, “particularly regional communities”. Energy Minister Chris Bowen said expected deliveries were still arriving and urged Australians not to panic buy, while Opposition Leader Angus Taylor accused the government of failing to stay on top of the crisis.
>>24395498 We don’t need anyone’s help: Trump lashes out at NATO allies, Australia over Iran war - (Video) US President Donald Trump has declared the United States did “not need the help of anyone” after lashing out at NATO allies and Australia for refusing to support efforts to secure shipping through the Strait of Hormuz. Trump said countries he believed had failed to assist should be remembered, and suggested Washington should think about its future relationship with the alliance when allies “don’t help us”. His comments followed decisions by countries including Australia and France not to join naval operations linked to the Iran war. The broadside came as Joe Kent, Trump’s appointee to lead the National Counterterrorism Centre, resigned, saying he could not “in good conscience” support the conflict. Trump dismissed Kent as “very weak on security” and said “it’s a good thing that he’s out”.
>>24395505 Andrew Hastie hits back at Trump broadside on Western allies over Strait of Hormuz - Opposition industry spokesman Andrew Hastie has criticised Donald Trump’s attack on Australia and other allies over the Strait of Hormuz, calling it a “petulant post” that showed a lack of respect for longstanding partners. Hastie said “you don’t treat allies like that” and argued the episode was a wake-up call for Australia to strengthen its own energy security and defence capabilities rather than rely too heavily on the global “rules-based order”, which he said was “dead”. He said Australia would remain close to the United States but needed to “stand on our own two feet”. The criticism followed Trump’s declaration that America did “not need the help of anyone” after allies including Australia declined to commit naval support in the Gulf.
>>24395515 Everyone’s issue: Fetterman calls out Australia on antisemitism, Strait of Hormuz - Democratic senator John Fetterman has said Australia has a responsibility to help reopen the Strait of Hormuz, arguing the issue is “everyone’s issue” and questioning why a key United States ally would not assist. Fetterman also said antisemitism in Australia was “a real issue” for him and criticised large anti-Israel demonstrations he said effectively helped Hamas. His remarks came as Donald Trump’s criticism of Australia for not backing United States operations in the Gulf exposed divisions on the conservative side of politics, with Andrew Hastie calling Trump’s attack “petulant” and disrespectful while Barnaby Joyce argued it suggested frustration in Washington over Australia’s response. Prime Minister Anthony Albanese rejected Hastie’s criticism and said he would continue to engage diplomatically with Trump.
>>24400114 Iranian women's football team back in Iran, state media announces - (Video) Iran’s national women’s football team has returned to Iran after several players sought asylum in Australia following their Women’s Asian Cup exit. Iranian media showed the squad arriving via Türkiye and crossing by bus at the border, where officials greeted them. Most of the team had left Australia last week through Malaysia and Oman, after a number of players who initially sought asylum reversed their decisions and agreed to return. Two players, Fatemeh Pasandideh and Atefeh Ramezanisadeh, remain in Australia and have been training with Brisbane Roar. The team had drawn international attention earlier in the tournament when some players stayed silent during Iran’s national anthem before later singing it in subsequent matches, amid wider concern about their safety if they returned during the Iran war.
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d0bc64 No.24599630
#45 - Part 6
Middle East Conflict - The Australian Perspective - Part 6
>>24400123 Over-prepared: PM's pledge on growing fuel crisis - (Video) Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has appointed former Australian Energy Regulator chief executive Anthea Harris to co-ordinate Australia’s fuel response as governments confront “unprecedented” supply pressures and worsening shortages in some regional areas. After a snap National Cabinet meeting, Albanese said fuel supply was “currently secure” but that he wanted Australia to be “over-prepared” for further supply-chain disruption caused by the Middle East conflict. Harris will act as a single point of contact across Commonwealth, state and territory governments and provide regular updates on fuel security and distribution. The Australian Competition and Consumer Commission has also launched an urgent investigation into major suppliers over diesel availability and possible anti-competitive conduct, while the government has released extra stock and eased fuel standards to boost supply.
>>24406599 Iranian deputy foreign minister labels US 'terrorists' and issues warning to Australia - (Video) Iran’s deputy foreign minister Esmaeil Baghaei has warned that Australian military assets in the Gulf could become targets, saying Tehran would not distinguish between countries acting in an “offensive” or “defensive” capacity after Canberra deployed an E-7A Wedgetail, personnel and air-to-air missiles to the United Arab Emirates. Baghaei said Australia had “decided to take sides with the aggressors” and accused the United States and Israel of “terrorist acts” over strikes that killed Iranian leaders and civilians. He also alleged members of Iran’s women’s football team had been offered asylum under false pretences in Australia, describing it as a “shameful sham posture”. Baghaei defended Iranian pressure on the Strait of Hormuz as justified retaliation, saying Iranian forces were “determined, willing, and capable” of defending the country.
>>24406727 Israel’s top diplomat in Australia lays out case for war against Iran - Israel’s ambassador to Australia, Hillel Newman, has defended the war against Iran as an “urgent act of self defence” aimed at removing what he called two “existential threats” - Tehran’s nuclear ambitions and ballistic missile program. Amid escalating strikes on oil and gas infrastructure across the Persian Gulf, Newman said the conflict was not about “territory or resources” but a struggle between “barbarism and civilisation” that could no longer be delayed. His intervention came as Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said the objectives of denying Iran a nuclear weapon capability and weakening its capacity to attack the region had been secured, while still urging de-escalation.
>>24406859 COMMENTARY: Evil Islamic regime posed existential threat to free world - "Three weeks ago, the United States and Israel launched a joint operation, “Roaring Lion”, also known as “Epic Fury”, against the brutal and destabilising Islamic Republic regime in Iran. This is not a war over territory or resources. It is an urgent act of self-defence for the protection of millions of innocent civilians, for regional stability, and for the values that underpin the free world. At its core, it is a struggle between barbarism and civilisation. The objectives of the current operation are to remove two existential threats: the regime’s nuclear ambitions and its ballistic missile program. Both had reached a critical and time-sensitive stage, with efforts under way to harden and conceal capabilities deep underground, placing them beyond the reach of any future intervention. The operation also targets the instruments of internal repression, including the IRGC and the Basij forces, which have brutally suppressed the Iranian people … Millions of Israelis have lived for decades under constant threat, with mere seconds to seek shelter from incoming rockets. Australians, living more than 12,000km from our region, have also experienced the threat and impact of Iranian terror. Iranian-linked activities reached Australian soil, and the government has responded with firm diplomatic and security measures, including the designation of the IRGC as a terror entity and the expulsion of the Iranian ambassador … Australia has acknowledged the threat and rightfully stood by its allies in confronting destabilising behaviour in the region. The dividing line today is not between religions or cultures, but between moderates and extremists. Israel, Australia and many countries across the Arab world stand firmly in the camp of moderation and want to see the circle of peace grow … In taking action, we are not only defending our citizens, we are helping to secure a safer and more stable future for our region and for partners such as Australia who share these values." - Hillel Newman, Israel’s new ambassador to Australia - The Australian
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d0bc64 No.24599631
#45 - Part 7
Middle East Conflict - The Australian Perspective - Part 7
>>24406916 Prime Minister Anthony Albanese heckled, protester thrown out after commotion at Lakemba Mosque - (Video) Prime Minister Anthony Albanese and Home Affairs Minister Tony Burke were heckled at Lakemba Mosque ahead of Eid al-Fitr celebrations, as protesters shouted “shame”, “disgrace” and “genocide supporters” during a speech to the congregation. The pair remained seated as community members tried to calm the disturbance, before security later signalled for them to leave. Police attended and escorted out a 33-year-old man after ordering him to move on. The disruption reflected continuing tensions between parts of the Muslim community and the federal government over Gaza, Islamophobia and other grievances. Lebanese Muslim Association spokesman Hajj Gamel Kheir said the decision to invite government representatives was about ensuring the community could be heard directly, while Albanese later said it was an “honour” to attend the mosque.
>>24406986 Albanese, Burke shouted at as anger erupts at Eid prayers at mosque - (Video) Prime Minister Anthony Albanese and Home Affairs Minister Tony Burke were shouted at during Eid prayers at Lakemba Mosque, where a small number of protesters yelled “genocide supporters” and called for them to be removed as anger over Gaza and rising Islamophobia spilled into the gathering. Albanese later said more than 30,000 people attended and that the reception was “overwhelmingly” positive apart from “a couple of hecklers”, while insisting they stayed until the end of the speech. Lebanese Muslim Association secretary Gamel Kheir defended inviting the politicians, saying engagement with government was necessary to give the community’s anger and concerns a voice. The incident highlighted divisions within the Muslim community over whether politicians should attend Ramadan and Eid events at places of worship.
>>24407100 Randa Abdel-Fattah slams Muslim event organisers for inviting PM, Burke to Lakemba mosque - (Video) Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has defended his appearance at Eid prayers at Lakemba Mosque after he and Home Affairs Minister Tony Burke were heckled as “genocide supporters”, saying the reception from a crowd of about 30,000 was “overwhelmingly” positive apart from “a couple of hecklers”. In the aftermath, pro-Palestine academic Randa Abdel-Fattah accused the Lebanese Muslim Association of rewarding Labor “for supporting the genocide” by inviting the pair, while Stand4Palestine and Sheik Wesam Charkawi also condemned the decision. LMA secretary Gamel Kheir said the invitation was intended as a “circuit breaker” after years without political engagement, arguing the community needed direct access to government to express anger over overseas conflict and rising Islamophobia in Australia.
>>24407150 Elon Musk’s brutal two-word Albo spray - Elon Musk has reacted to footage of Prime Minister Anthony Albanese being heckled at Lakemba Mosque by describing him on X as a “simple man” after protesters shouted “genocide supporters” during Eid celebrations. Albanese and Home Affairs Minister Tony Burke were seated at the front of the mosque when the disruption occurred, with one protester later identified as Stand4Palestine activist Mukhlis Mah. Albanese said the reception from about 30,000 attendees was “overwhelmingly” positive apart from “a couple of hecklers”, and said the disturbance was handled by the community. NSW Police said officers removed a 33-year-old man from the premises and issued a move-on direction. The Lebanese Muslim Association defended inviting Albanese, saying engagement with elected leaders was not a “betrayal” of community concerns over Gaza and Lebanon.
>>24407315 We always say yes to them: Trump wants Australia to participate in Iran war - (Video) US President Donald Trump has said he was surprised Australia “said no” to his request for help in Iran and urged Canberra to “get involved”, declaring “we always say yes to them”. Trump did not specify what request he was referring to, but his remarks followed earlier acknowledgments from Deputy Prime Minister and Defence Minister Richard Marles that Washington had sought Australian assistance, while Canberra instead agreed to deploy a Wedgetail surveillance aircraft to support the United Arab Emirates. Marles has said there was no United States request for an Australian warship in the Strait of Hormuz. Trump also indicated the United States was considering winding down operations in Iran and wanted other countries more dependent on Middle East oil shipments to police the strait once Tehran’s threat had been reduced.
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d0bc64 No.24599632
#45 - Part 8
Middle East Conflict - The Australian Perspective - Part 8
>>24411207 He hasn’t asked: Albanese denies Trump’s claim he requested Australia join Iran war - (Video) Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has rejected Donald Trump’s claim that Australia refused a request to help with the war in Iran, saying Canberra had “done what we have been asked to do” and insisting the US president “hasn’t asked” for more. Albanese said Australia had agreed to the United Arab Emirates’ request for an E-7A Wedgetail deployment and personnel, but Deputy Prime Minister and Defence Minister Richard Marles again said there had been no request from Washington for assistance in unblocking the Strait of Hormuz. The dispute came as the United States temporarily lifted sanctions on about 140 million barrels of Iranian oil already at sea to ease pressure on global markets, while Trump said he was considering “winding down” military operations but still rejected a ceasefire.
>>24411547 Australia joins UK, Japan pledging ‘appropriate efforts’ in Strait of Hormuz - Australia has joined 21 other countries in backing a statement expressing readiness to “contribute to appropriate efforts” to ensure safe passage through the Strait of Hormuz, widening its public support for international action after earlier ruling out sending warships. The statement, first issued by countries including the United Kingdom, France, Germany, Italy, the Netherlands, Japan and Canada, condemned Iran’s attacks on commercial shipping and the “de facto closure” of the strait, warning of threats to global energy supply and international security. Australia’s endorsement came after ministers said Canberra had not been asked to send a ship and was instead contributing aircraft support to the United Arab Emirates. The shift also followed Donald Trump’s criticism of allies including Australia for failing to “get involved” more directly in the crisis.
>>24411596 Bowen warns of future ‘bumps’ in oil supplies as six ships cancelled - Energy Minister Chris Bowen has warned of future “bumps” in Australia’s fuel supply after six tanker deliveries due next month were cancelled or deferred amid disruption caused by the Middle East conflict. Bowen said the government was aware of six affected shipments out of about 81 monthly deliveries, with some already replaced by alternative sources, including from Malaysia. He said Australia’s latest stocktake showed 38 days of petrol and 30 days of diesel and jet fuel, and stressed ministers were not currently considering emergency rationing powers under the Liquid Fuel Emergency Act. Bowen said supply disruptions were more likely to come in waves rather than a complete halt, with government, refiners and importers working to manage interruptions and reduce impacts, particularly in regional and remote areas.
>>24415984 Australia, Singapore to work together on fuel security after shipments cancelled - (Video) Australia and Singapore have agreed to work together to keep petrol, diesel and gas flowing after several fuel shipments scheduled for Australian ports next month were cancelled or deferred. Prime Minister Anthony Albanese and Singaporean counterpart Lawrence Wong said they shared deep concern about the Middle East conflict’s impact on regional energy supply chains and prices, and pledged to strengthen energy security, support open trade flows and consult each other on disruptions affecting petroleum oils and liquefied natural gas. The agreement came as the Albanese government intensified talks with Asian partners after six tankers from key suppliers including Malaysia, Singapore and South Korea were affected. Ministers also pointed to Australia’s position as a major liquefied natural gas exporter as leverage in maintaining reciprocal energy flows with regional partners.
>>24420519 Fuel supply cliff to hit at end of April as petrol prices in Australia hit record highs - (Video) Petrol prices have surged to a record national average of $2.38 a litre as Australia faces a potential fuel supply “cliff” by late April, with Asian refineries that supply about 80 per cent of imports expected to run out of crude due to the Iran war. Officials and fuel companies are scrambling to secure alternative shipments as China pauses some exports and global supply chains tighten. Ampol warned that if disruptions persist, pressure on prices and supply will intensify, while analysts flagged uncertainty over deliveries beyond mid-April. The government has eased fuel standards to boost supply flexibility and is seeking new sources globally. Despite reassurances that shipments are arriving, regional shortages have emerged, driven partly by panic buying and strained distribution networks.
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d0bc64 No.24599633
#45 - Part 9
Middle East Conflict - The Australian Perspective - Part 9
>>24424585 Bowen replaces cancelled oil ships, says rationing is a last resort - (Video) Energy Minister Chris Bowen has confirmed six cancelled fuel shipments have been replaced with alternative imports, with three additional deliveries secured to bolster supply, as the government insists rationing remains a last resort. Bowen said all expected April shipments had been restored via spot market sourcing and extra cargoes arranged for April and May. He also announced agreements to release fuel from Australia’s strategic reserves to support regional areas facing shortages. Despite growing outages at service stations, Bowen maintained there was no national supply shortfall, attributing disruptions to demand spikes driven by panic buying and stockpiling. He ruled out measures such as purchase caps, saying rationing would only occur in an “absolute worst-case” scenario, while the opposition pressed for clearer plans to address distribution gaps.
>>24424596 Japanese ambassador signals fuel-for-LNG swap to secure Australia’s energy supply - Japan’s ambassador to Australia, Kazuhiro Suzuki, has flagged the possibility of a fuel-for-LNG swap to support Australia’s energy security, as supply pressures intensify following the Iran war. He said Japan could assist if shortages became acute, noting “maybe we could collaborate and then do something together”, while stressing any support would depend on clearer evidence of market conditions. Suzuki highlighted Japan’s significant fuel reserves but warned against new Australian taxes on LNG exports, saying “surprise… is always bad” and could deter Japanese investment. The proposal reflects growing regional interdependence, with Australia supplying liquefied natural gas to Japan while relying on imported liquid fuels. Resources Minister Madeleine King said both nations understood “we rely on liquid fuels” and must work together on energy security.
>>24424601 Shut the door: Australia to ban Iranian visa holders citing national interest - Australia has moved to restrict re-entry for certain Iranian visitor visa holders, citing national interest concerns linked to the Iran conflict following strikes involving the United States and Israel. The Albanese government will bar subclass 600 visa holders outside Australia from returning for six months, with exemptions for spouses, de facto partners, dependent children, or parents of minors already in Australia. The government said the war has increased the risk some temporary visa holders may be unable or unwilling to depart when visas expire, while allowing “flexibility in limited cases” and case-by-case assessments. Home Affairs Minister Tony Burke said existing visas “may not have been issued” under current conditions. Critics, including asylum advocates, said the changes “shut the door” on people seeking safety.
>>24424623 Palestinian flag to be lowered from city hall after fiery debate - A Palestinian flag flown above Darebin City Council in Melbourne’s north will be removed after councillors voted to ban international flags following a heated 90-minute debate. The new policy retains only Australian, Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander flags, with the Preston flag to be lowered within 10 working days and marked by a “brief respectful ceremony”. Councillors said community feedback from more than 500 submissions was “quite clear” in opposing international flags, describing the policy as a “careful balance” ensuring “transparency, equity and accountability”. Opponents argued the move “den[ies] our residents a right to have a say” and called it “outrageous”. The decision follows earlier disputes, including calls to replace the flag with a “peace flag” after the Bondi attack.
>>24428984 PM calls second emergency national cabinet meeting over fuel crisis - (Video) Prime Minister Anthony Albanese will convene a second emergency national cabinet meeting as fuel shortages and surging prices disrupt industries and threaten broader economic impacts. About 470 service stations have run out of at least one fuel type, as the Iran conflict and Strait of Hormuz blockade continue to strain global supply. Albanese said “coordinating that activity is important” to ensure national consistency, with Fuel Supply Taskforce Coordinator Anthea Harris working across jurisdictions. The government maintains the issue is driven by demand rather than supply, urging Australians to avoid panic buying, while securing additional tankers and releasing emergency reserves. Business groups warned supply chains are becoming “fragile and unreliable”, calling for “every option” to be considered, including rationing and tax relief measures.
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d0bc64 No.24599634
#45 - Part 10
Middle East Conflict - The Australian Perspective - Part 10
>>24428994 Fuel caps hit cities as supply strains spread beyond regions - Fuel purchase limits have begun appearing in metropolitan areas as supply strains spread beyond regional Australia, signalling deeper pressure on distribution despite assurances inventories remain adequate. Some service stations, including sites in Sydney, have imposed caps such as 50 litres per vehicle and banned jerry cans to “stretch available supply” and discourage stockpiling. The shift into cities suggests disruptions are no longer isolated, with limits varying by operator and delivery schedules. Authorities maintain the issue is driven by demand and urge motorists to avoid panic buying, but industry participants say restrictions reflect growing strain. The development highlights the fragility of Australia’s just-in-time fuel system, with reliance on imports and uncertainty over Iran-linked disruptions raising concerns about replenishing stockpiles and maintaining consistent supply.
>>24429008 Bowen’s big stick spurs biggest intervention since WWII to secure fuel for bush - The federal government has launched its most significant intervention in the fuel market since World War II, forcing suppliers to prioritise regional service stations amid escalating shortages. Energy Minister Chris Bowen used the threat of emergency powers to compel companies to sell fuel to independent operators, after major retailers dominated supply through long-term contracts. The government has released 20 per cent of national stockpiles, equivalent to several days’ supply, to ease pressure in the bush. Bowen said deliveries to regional areas had surged, with some suppliers increasing volumes by more than 40 per cent. The move follows panic buying and a doubling of demand after the Iran conflict, exposing vulnerabilities in Australia’s fuel supply system.
>>24433108 Albanese says he hasn’t received direct request for help after Trump takes swipe at ‘not great’ Australia - (Video) Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has downplayed criticism from United States President Donald Trump, who said Australia was “not great” for not offering more support in the Iran conflict. Albanese said no direct request for additional assistance had been made, adding that “there is no request … that has not been agreed to”. Australia has deployed a Wedgetail surveillance aircraft and personnel to the United Arab Emirates in a defensive role, supporting regional operations. Defence Minister Richard Marles said current contributions align with national interests, while leaving open the possibility of further support if requested. The exchange highlights tensions over burden-sharing, with Albanese reiterating Australia’s focus on de-escalation and measured involvement.
>>24440485 Ready for what may come: Australia to scour the globe for extra fuel - (Video) The federal government will rush emergency laws into parliament to secure additional fuel supplies, underwriting private importers to source petrol, diesel and crude oil amid escalating shortages linked to the Iran conflict. The plan will amend legislation to allow Export Finance Australia to provide insurance and financial backing, encouraging companies to purchase high-cost shipments without bearing full commercial risk. Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said the aim was to ensure Australia is “ready for what may come” as global oil supply tightens and prices surge. While supply remains stable in the short term, Australia’s heavy reliance on imports and dwindling refinery stocks have heightened concern about future availability, prompting a broader national response across industry and government agencies.
>>24440495 PM announces new powers to boost fuel supply amid Middle East tensions - (Video) The federal government will underwrite the purchase of additional fuel shipments to boost supply as shortages spread across Australia during the Middle East conflict. Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said the plan would see public funds absorb financial risks for high-cost imports, giving suppliers confidence to secure “additional and discretionary cargoes” beyond normal contracts. Hundreds of service stations are already experiencing shortages, particularly in New South Wales and Queensland. The legislation, to be introduced Monday, will amend existing laws to grant new fuel security powers. The government insists shortages are driven by demand, warning panic buying is “not sensible”, while maintaining reserves exceed one month. The opposition has signalled cautious support, calling the measures appropriate for “extraordinary times” while continuing to push for fuel excise cuts.
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d0bc64 No.24599635
#45 - Part 11
Middle East Conflict - The Australian Perspective - Part 11
>>24440510 Andrew Hastie says Iran war a “huge miscalculation” by Donald Trump - (Video) Shadow Industry Minister Andrew Hastie has warned the Iran war is damaging United States credibility and could erode Australian confidence in the alliance, calling the conflict a “huge miscalculation”. He said Australia had not been consulted and was now exposed to economic risks, with Iran able to “hold the whole world economy to ransom” through the Strait of Hormuz. Hastie said Australians would “question the judgement” of President Donald Trump, while describing criticism of Australia’s response as “petulant”. He also signalled openness to taxing gas exporters, saying the crisis marked a “new era” and that big business had “lost their social licence”. The government continues to focus on fuel supply measures, with further national coordination expected as economic pressures intensify.
>>24443548 Fuel price cut for Easter as fears grow nation will be in recession by Christmas - (Video) The federal government will halve the fuel excise for three months from April 1, cutting petrol prices by 26 cents per litre as part of a national response to the fuel crisis linked to the Iran conflict. Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said supply would remain stable into May, while urging Australians to continue travel plans and support the economy. The plan includes releasing reserves, underwriting imports and preparing further measures such as carpooling and potential rationing if shortages worsen. Economists warned surging oil prices could drive inflation higher and force multiple interest rate rises, raising the risk of recession by Christmas. Treasurer Jim Chalmers said the tax cut would deliver “targeted” relief, while opposition figures warned it could add pressure to inflation.
>>24443557 Albanese: I want “certainty” from Trump on Iran war aims - (Video) Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has called for greater clarity from United States President Donald Trump on the objectives of the Iran war, urging “certainty” and de-escalation as tensions escalate. Albanese said a clearer strategy was needed as conflicting signals emerged, with Washington pursuing negotiations while increasing troop deployments and considering expanded military actions. Trump said a deal could be reached “fairly quickly” but also raised the prospect of seizing Iran’s oil, signalling potential escalation. Albanese said while Iran’s regime was “abhorrent and reprehensible”, history showed externally imposed regime change was difficult and often counterproductive. He said recent strikes had “clearly” degraded Iran’s nuclear and proxy capabilities, but broader outcomes remained uncertain, with negotiations and military activity continuing in parallel.
>>24447111 Anthony Albanese calls for “more certainty” on US objectives in Iran war - (Video) Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has urged the United States to clarify its objectives and commit to an end point in the Iran war as global fuel prices surge, telling ABC’s 7.30 program he wanted “more certainty” and a “de-escalation”. Albanese warned the conflict was causing “devastating” economic damage and prolonged impacts. He said the US had likely achieved its initial goals of curbing Iran’s nuclear ambitions and degrading its military capacity, but questioned the feasibility of externally imposed regime change. While reaffirming Australia’s “constructive relationship” with President Donald Trump, Albanese called for clearer direction as the US weighs further military steps. Opposition Leader Angus Taylor also called for the Strait of Hormuz to reopen to ease fuel costs, while broader political pressure grows for an end to the conflict.
>>24451159 Rare National Address:‘The months ahead may not be easy’: PM urges Australians to save fuel, catch bus- (Video) Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has warned Australians the economic impacts of the Middle East conflict will be felt for months, urging reduced fuel use and greater reliance on public transport. In a rare national address broadcast across television and radio, he said motorists should “not take more fuel than you need” and consider alternatives to conserve supplies for critical industries. Albanese outlined government measures including fuel excise cuts, a national fuel security plan and coordination with states, while stressing that shortages are not yet widespread. He said the government could not eliminate pressures but would act to “protect Australia from the worst of it”, signalling concern about worsening conditions. Authorities are preparing contingency measures, including potential rationing and demand controls, as concerns grow about supply disruptions, panic buying and sustained economic strain in the months ahead.
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d0bc64 No.24599636
#45 - Part 12
Middle East Conflict - The Australian Perspective - Part 12
>>24459070 Albanese calls for calm as world sits on edge of grim economic future - Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has urged Australians to remain calm and continue normal activities over Easter, while warning of a prolonged economic shock from the Iran conflict in a rare national address. The prime-time broadcast, the first of its kind since 2020, signalled rising concern within government about fuel shortages and global instability. Albanese said “the months ahead may not be easy” and flagged potential tougher conservation measures, urging motorists to limit fuel use and consider public transport. He outlined contingency planning with states under a phased national fuel strategy, including possible rationing if supply worsens. The address comes amid panic buying and mounting economic pressure, with Albanese also preparing a major economic package aimed at supporting businesses and reshaping Australia’s industrial base in response to the crisis.
>>24459075 Anthony Albanese hands out $1bn in Iran War fuel crisis loans to farmers and truckies - The federal government will provide $1 billion in interest-free loans to businesses affected by the fuel crisis linked to the Iran conflict, targeting sectors critical to supply chains including freight operators, fuel producers and fertiliser manufacturers. Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said the funding would act as a “shock absorber” for industries under pressure from rising costs and supply disruptions. The announcement forms part of a broader economic response that includes fuel excise cuts, underwriting fuel imports and suspending heavy vehicle charges. Albanese said the upcoming budget would be the government’s “most ambitious”, balancing long-term reform with immediate cost-of-living relief. The measures follow a rare national address warning Australians of prolonged economic strain as the global energy shock continues to impact businesses and households nationwide across coming months and into the foreseeable future.
>>24459082 Fuel prices fall as Australian servos fast-track excise cuts - (Video) Petrol prices have fallen across major Australian cities as retailers moved early to pass on the federal government’s 26¢-a-litre excise cut, with some choosing to absorb short-term losses to deliver immediate relief. In Melbourne, average unleaded dropped 16¢ to $2.43 a litre, while Sydney fell about 13¢ to $2.44, and larger declines were recorded in Brisbane, Hobart and Adelaide. The cuts follow a temporary halving of the fuel excise introduced to ease cost-of-living pressures amid disruptions to global oil supply caused by conflict in the Middle East. Some operators “immediately passed on the full 26¢ excise reduction”, with prices at many outlets falling below $2.30. However, not all stations have reduced prices yet, as some are waiting to restock cheaper fuel, meaning relief will be uneven in the short term.
>>24459089 Australia to join 34 countries - but not the US - in meeting on Strait of Hormuz - Australia will join 34 other nations in a United Kingdom-led virtual meeting to coordinate efforts to reopen and secure the Strait of Hormuz amid ongoing global oil disruptions, with the United States notably absent from talks. Foreign Minister Penny Wong will represent Australia, which already has an E-7 Wedgetail aircraft and 85 personnel deployed to the United Arab Emirates. Defence Minister Richard Marles said Australia was “talking with countries like the UK and France” about potential contributions but stressed conditions were not yet suitable for further action. The meeting follows a joint statement backing coordinated action, while Australia is also exploring regional diplomacy to safeguard fuel supplies.
>>24459121 Australia joins 40 other nations to condemn Iran for 'deliberately inflicting economic pain' during meeting over Strait of Hormuz strategy - Australia has joined more than 40 countries in condemning Iran’s “weaponisation” of the Strait of Hormuz during a United Kingdom-led meeting aimed at coordinating efforts to reopen the critical waterway. Foreign Minister Penny Wong said Iran was “deliberately inflicting economic pain” but confirmed no military or offensive action would be taken, with discussions focused on “diplomatic and civilian initiatives” to restore safe passage. The meeting, which excluded the United States, also addressed freeing thousands of ships and seafarers trapped by the disruption. Australia reaffirmed its support for de-escalation while maintaining a surveillance presence in the Gulf. The Strait’s near closure has sharply reduced global oil flows and driven prices higher, intensifying economic pressures worldwide.
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d0bc64 No.24599637
#45 - Part 13
Middle East Conflict - The Australian Perspective - Part 13
>>24463084 Australia to take part in military talks to reopen Strait of Hormuz - Australian defence officials will join international military planners in United Kingdom-led talks to develop options for reopening and securing the Strait of Hormuz, as Iran’s disruption of shipping continues to drive a global energy crisis. The talks follow a 40-nation meeting condemning Iran’s actions, with Foreign Minister Penny Wong backing “diplomatic and civilian initiatives” while ruling out offensive involvement. Australia has deployed an E-7A Wedgetail aircraft and personnel to support Gulf partners, and maintains a special forces presence in the region as a precaution. Iran has moved to impose transit fees on vessels, with some ships already charged, while traffic through the strait has sharply declined. Defence Minister Richard Marles said Australia was not committing troops to the conflict, amid concerns over limited naval capability to support any future operation.
>>24469993 Australia's fuel shipments secured 'well into' May, Energy Minister Chris Bowen says - (Video) Australia has secured fuel shipments “well into” May, with the government extending supply certainty beyond earlier April forecasts as shortages ease across parts of the country. Energy Minister Chris Bowen said contracted shipments were legally locked in, with no cancellations reported and additional orders arriving from Asia, the United States and Mexico. The number of service stations without diesel has fallen from more than 400 to 274, with shortages easing nationally, though New South Wales remains more affected due to agricultural demand. Australia’s fuel reserves remain limited, covering about 39 days of petrol, 29 days of diesel and 30 days of jet fuel, unchanged since the conflict began. The government continues to pursue international supply agreements and has warned conditions remain uncertain as global disruptions persist.
>>24474340 ‘Didn’t help us’: United States President Donald Trump hits out at Australia, NATO over support in Iran conflict - (Video) United States President Donald Trump has criticised Australia and key allies, claiming they "didn’t help us" during the ongoing conflict with Iran while accusing NATO of going "out of their way not to help" US efforts. He warned of potential escalation, saying the US could strike Iranian infrastructure, including power plants and bridges, and set a deadline for Tehran to agree to terms aimed at ending the five-week war. Australian Foreign Minister Penny Wong said Australia had supported international efforts focused on keeping the Strait of Hormuz open through diplomatic coordination, stressing the government was "not taking offensive action" or deploying troops. Deputy Prime Minister Richard Marles confirmed Australia’s participation in international talks, while Nationals leader Matt Canavan said it remained unclear what additional support the US expected from Canberra.
>>24478341 Anthony Albanese labels US President Donald Trump’s ‘whole civilisation will die’ comments inappropriate - (Video) Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has criticised United States President Donald Trump’s warning that a “whole civilisation will die” if Iran failed to reopen the Strait of Hormuz, describing the remarks as "inappropriate" and "extraordinary" for a world leader. He said threats involving damage to civilian infrastructure raised concerns and stressed that all conflict must adhere to international law, including protecting civilians. Albanese reiterated Australia’s support for de-escalation following a provisional ceasefire between the US, Israel and Iran, while maintaining the alliance with Washington remained strong. Opposition Leader Angus Taylor said the comments were “not the words I would use” but emphasised the importance of reopening the Strait, while Nationals leader Matt Canavan described the remarks as beyond acceptable bounds.
>>24474347 Albanese in dash to Singapore to secure fuel as Trump deadline looms - (Video) Prime Minister Anthony Albanese will travel to Singapore to secure fuel supplies as Australia moves to shore up energy security amid threats to global oil flows during the Iran conflict. The government is seeking to ensure continued access to petrol, diesel and liquefied natural gas, with Singapore a critical refining hub supplying a significant share of Australia’s fuel imports. The trip has been brought forward as oil prices surge and concerns grow over disruptions to the Strait of Hormuz, with Albanese saying Australia’s supply position is "currently in a secure position" but efforts are under way to keep fuel flowing. Ministers are also engaging regional partners and mediators to support de-escalation, while emergency measures, including funding and fuel management strategies, have been introduced to stabilise supply and reduce shortages.
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d0bc64 No.24599638
#45 - Part 14
Middle East Conflict - The Australian Perspective - Part 14
>>24484792 Albanese says fuel stocks looking good almost to June as he jets to Singapore - (Video) Prime Minister Anthony Albanese says Australia’s fuel supplies are secured almost to June as he travels to Singapore to strengthen energy ties amid ongoing instability in the Middle East. He described the ceasefire in the Iran conflict as a "fragile peace" and urged restraint, warning of broader regional impacts including tensions involving Lebanon. The government has accelerated efforts to secure fuel imports, including emergency funding and negotiations with key suppliers, as concerns persist over disruptions to the Strait of Hormuz. Energy Minister Chris Bowen said supply is now expected to last several weeks into May, while diesel shortages remain a concern. Albanese said the visit to Singapore, a major refining hub, was critical to maintaining supply, as Australia seeks to stabilise fuel access and manage economic risks linked to the global oil crisis.
>>24484796 PM lands in Singapore on mission to cement fuel supply - (Video) Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has arrived in Singapore to secure fuel supplies, highlighting Australia’s reliance on the country which already provides more than half its petrol. The visit comes amid disruptions to global oil flows linked to instability in the Strait of Hormuz, with Albanese saying the relationship is based on "trust and mutual interest" as both nations seek to maintain reliable supply. Australia is positioning its liquefied natural gas exports as leverage in negotiations, while the government has introduced measures to guarantee fuel shipments and support domestic supply. Analysts said a deal is likely but warned broader agreements may be needed as supply tightens. Officials and experts cautioned that shipping through the Strait remains limited and recovery will take time, with uncertainty continuing to pose risks to fuel availability.
>>24488536 Singapore all but guarantees fuel supply as Albanese hails trip a ‘win-win’ - Singapore has pledged to continue supplying Australia with more than half its petrol as Prime Minister Anthony Albanese secured assurances during talks with counterpart Lawrence Wong, while warning supply depends on global crude availability. Albanese described the arrangement as a "win-win", with Australia offering liquefied natural gas exports in return for stable fuel access amid ongoing disruption to global oil markets. Both leaders committed to maintaining trade flows and strengthening energy cooperation, though no binding guarantee was reached. Wong said exports would continue as long as upstream supplies hold, highlighting risks tied to the Strait of Hormuz crisis. The agreement comes as Australia seeks to shore up energy security, with officials warning that continued instability and reduced tanker traffic could still impact supply and prices despite improved short-term outlooks.
>>24494406 Malaysia, Brunei next on Anthony Albanese’s fuel mission in Asia - (Video) Prime Minister Anthony Albanese will travel to Brunei and Malaysia as part of an expanded effort to secure fuel supplies, warning key Asian producers may prioritise domestic demand if the global oil crisis worsens. The trip follows talks in Singapore and aims to strengthen energy ties with major suppliers, with Malaysia providing a significant share of Australia’s diesel and Brunei contributing to diesel and fertiliser inputs. Albanese said the focus was on building confidence in trade rather than securing formal agreements, while highlighting Australia’s role as a reliable gas exporter. The government has confirmed fuel supplies are secured until late May but faces uncertainty beyond that, prompting a regional diplomatic push. Officials also warned disruptions to the Strait of Hormuz and potential export controls remain key risks to supply and prices.
>>24494409 Australia won't join Trump's Strait of Hormuz blockade - (Video) Australia will not participate in a United States-led blockade of the Strait of Hormuz, with the federal government warning the move risks further destabilising global trade during an already volatile conflict. Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said Australia had not been asked to assist and did not expect a request, describing the US decision as unilateral while urging a return to negotiations. Resources Minister Madeleine King said the blockade placed global trade in a "very difficult" position and warned any ongoing Iranian toll on the strait would be unsustainable. Opposition figures said any involvement would need to meet national interest and capability tests. The Strait, a key oil transit route, has become central to escalating tensions, with both the blockade and toll measures raising concerns about supply disruptions and economic impacts.
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d0bc64 No.24599639
#45 - Part 15
Middle East Conflict - The Australian Perspective - Part 15
>>24498508 Australia joins strait-talking summit with France and UK, and without the US - Australia will participate in a European-led summit with France and the United Kingdom to coordinate a multinational effort to safeguard shipping in the Strait of Hormuz once the current conflict subsides. The initiative, involving about 40 countries, is intended to restore freedom of navigation through a “strictly defensive” mission separate from ongoing hostilities and independent of United States blockade actions. Prime Minister Anthony Albanese may attend remotely due to regional travel, with Foreign Minister Penny Wong a potential delegate. The summit comes as tensions escalate following a US naval blockade targeting Iranian-linked shipping, raising risks to global trade flows. Australian officials emphasised support for a diplomatic reopening of the strait, while international discussions continue on how to stabilise the key oil transit route.
>>24502433 Brunei pledges to strengthen fuel supply to Australia - (Video) Brunei has assured Australia it will not impose export restrictions on fuel supplies, as Prime Minister Anthony Albanese secured commitments during talks with Sultan Hassanal Bolkiah to maintain and expand energy trade. The leaders expressed “deep concern” over the Middle East conflict and agreed to strengthen supply chains for petrol, diesel and fertiliser, with Brunei a key supplier of diesel and urea to Australia. Albanese reiterated calls for de-escalation and the reopening of the Strait of Hormuz, warning ongoing disruption was affecting regional supply and global markets. Foreign Minister Penny Wong said Australia continued to support freedom of navigation and was working with international partners on post-conflict arrangements. The visit forms part of a broader regional effort to stabilise fuel access and reduce risks to the domestic economy.
>>24505851 Workers flee massive fireball as explosions rock Geelong refinery - (Video) A major fire at the Geelong oil refinery has damaged one of Australia’s two remaining refineries, forcing output cuts and raising pressure on fuel supplies already strained by Middle East conflict. The blaze, sparked by an equipment failure in piping just after 11pm, triggered explosions and a large fireball, with workers fleeing as flames reached up to 60 metres. About 100 personnel contained the fire within 13 hours, with no injuries, as officials said it “could have been a catastrophic fire”. The facility, supplying 50 per cent of Victoria’s fuel and 10 per cent nationally, has reduced production to “minimum rates”, though authorities said imports would offset losses. Workers described scenes like a “war zone” and “a big bloody fireball”, while residents reported homes shaking and skies glowing red as emergency warnings were issued across Geelong.
>>24505893 Cause of Geelong refinery blaze confirmed, refinery ‘still making fuel’ despite incident - (Video) Authorities have confirmed a gas leak from a mechanical component caused the fire at Viva Energy’s Geelong refinery, which remains operational despite the incident at the critical facility supplying 50 per cent of Victoria’s fuel and 10 per cent nationally. Fire Rescue Victoria said the leak ignited, triggering explosions in what was described as a “very, very dangerous” and “quite ferocious” blaze. The fire was contained and extinguished by early afternoon, with no injuries reported, and officials confirmed there is “no threat to the community”. Viva said the plant is still producing petrol, diesel and jet fuel at “pretty decent rates”, though at reduced capacity, while authorities warned it “will impact on production” particularly petrol output. The incident comes amid “huge pressure” on fuel supplies linked to the Middle East conflict, with investigations continuing into the exact cause.
>>24505908 Refinery blaze may impact Australia's petrol production 'for some time' - (Video) A fire at the Geelong oil refinery may impact Australia’s petrol supply “for some time”, Energy Minister Chris Bowen has warned, as the government manages fuel pressures linked to the Middle East conflict. The blaze, which broke out just after 11pm with explosions reported, is believed to have been an accident, with no suspicious circumstances identified. The refinery continues producing diesel and jet fuel at “reduced levels”, while petrol output is expected to be most affected. Viva Energy said damaged units converting LPG to gasoline components are offline, but other production areas remain operational and output is still running at “pretty decent rates”. Officials said any shortfall would be covered by imports, though analysts warned the disruption could “increase the risk of fuel shortages” and place pressure on the nation’s only other refinery as global supply constraints intensify.
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d0bc64 No.24599640
#45 - Part 16
Middle East Conflict - The Australian Perspective - Part 16
>>24505912 PM confirms purchase of 100m litres of diesel in bid to boost supply amid Iran war oil crisis - (Video) The federal government has used new fuel security powers to secure 100 million litres of diesel, as Prime Minister Anthony Albanese confirmed two shipments totalling 570,000 barrels from Brunei and South Korea to bolster supply during the Middle East conflict. The scheme allows companies to purchase fuel while the government underwrites financial risk for costly shipments. Albanese said the move was a “practical outcome” of regional engagement, with fuel able to be directed where needed most, “including to our farmers”. The diesel was purchased by Viva Energy, as the Geelong refinery outage adds pressure to domestic supply. Albanese said agreements with Malaysia, Brunei and Singapore aim to secure ongoing supply, as global markets face “unprecedented energy supply shocks” linked to disruptions in the Strait of Hormuz.
>>24505937 Richard Marles nails colours to the mast: ‘it’s the time for allies and order’ - Defence Minister Richard Marles has signalled Australia could play a post-war role in securing the Strait of Hormuz while defending the US alliance and the rules-based international order amid Middle East tensions. Marles said a ceasefire offered a “critical opportunity to move back from the brink” and restore global fuel supply chains, adding Australia would do “all within its power” to support peace. He reaffirmed the alliance, stating there is “no effective balance of power in the Indo-Pacific” without the United States, and argued the rules-based order still gives middle powers “agency”. Australia has deployed a Wedgetail surveillance aircraft to the United Arab Emirates, with the navy “ready” to assist US-led operations if required. Opposition Leader Angus Taylor described the rules-based order as “wishful thinking” in arguing it reflected a bygone era and calling for closer defence and supply chain cooperation among middle powers.
>>24512142 Viva Energy denies delayed maintenance caused major Corio refinery fire - Viva Energy has denied that delayed maintenance contributed to the Geelong refinery fire, as authorities point to a likely “mechanical or engineering failure” and investigations continue into the cause of the explosions. Fire Rescue Victoria said early assessments indicated an equipment fault, while the company attributed the incident to a gas leak in a transfer section of the plant. General manager Bill Patterson said there was “no delayed maintenance” linked to the affected unit, despite acknowledging some works had been postponed amid Middle East instability. He stressed there was “no link” identified so far, though a full investigation would examine both the release of flammable material and ignition source. The ageing 70-year-old facility has reduced some output, but Viva said supply impacts would be limited, as officials warned the incident could increase pressure on national fuel security settings.
>>24512222 Fuel farce inflamed as Chris Bowen declares no crisis of petrol supplies - Energy Minister Chris Bowen has said the Geelong refinery fire will not trigger an immediate escalation of the national fuel security plan or cause higher petrol prices, despite warnings it will reduce domestic supply. Bowen said the disruption was “not a good development” but insisted it would not move Australia beyond stage two, as Viva Energy could replace lost petrol production with imports. Experts warned the outage could cut petrol output for months, increase reliance on overseas fuel and raise the risk of rationing during the Middle East conflict. Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said the fire would “clearly” have consequences, while analysts argued the government may need to act sooner to secure supply. Bowen also signalled support for new domestic oil projects if they meet environmental and economic criteria.
>>24512388 Trump again lashes Australia over war but says peace coming soon - (Video) US President Donald Trump has criticised Australia for not supporting efforts to reopen the Strait of Hormuz, while claiming a deal to end the Iran war could come “fairly soon” as negotiations progress. Trump said he was “not happy with Australia” and other allies for failing to assist, as the US expanded naval operations to block Iran and prevent resupply. The conflict has disrupted global energy markets, with the strait effectively closed and fuel supplies strained. Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said Australia had engaged “constructively” with Washington, while Treasurer Jim Chalmers said he was unaware of any formal request for assistance. US Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth warned combat operations could resume “at the push of a button” if talks fail, as diplomatic efforts continue alongside military pressure.
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d0bc64 No.24599641
#45 - Part 17
Middle East Conflict - The Australian Perspective - Part 17
>>24512394 Donald Trump repeats he is 'not happy with Australia' as Strait of Hormuz crisis continues - (Video) US President Donald Trump has again criticised Australia for not supporting efforts in the Strait of Hormuz, saying he was “not happy with Australia” for failing to assist when asked, though he did not specify what action he wanted. Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said there had been “no new requests” from the United States, while Defence Minister Richard Marles confirmed no “specific request” had been received despite ongoing discussions with US officials. The disagreement comes as Iran’s closure of the strait and a US naval blockade disrupt global energy supplies, with American forces expanding operations to intercept vessels linked to Tehran. Opposition figures have urged clarification of the conflicting claims, while Australia continues to secure fuel imports and participate in international talks on safeguarding shipping routes.
>>24512401 Anthony Albanese rejects Donald Trump swipe at Australian involvement in Strait of Hormuz - (Video) Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has rejected criticism from US President Donald Trump over Australia’s role in the Strait of Hormuz, insisting there has been “no new requests” from Washington despite repeated claims from the White House. Albanese said the US had indicated it “has got this”, while Foreign Minister Penny Wong confirmed Australia was providing “defensive capability” at the request of the United Arab Emirates and was “not taking offensive action against Iran”. Defence Minister Richard Marles said no “specific request” had been received, as Treasurer Jim Chalmers also said he was unaware of any “formal request”. The dispute highlights a growing divergence in public messaging between the allies, with opposition figures warning the difference in understanding is “not a good thing” for the security relationship as tensions persist.
>>24512402 Slammed by Trump in the morning, Albanese dials into call with Macron, Starmer on reopening the strait - (Video) Prime Minister Anthony Albanese will join a call with European leaders including French President Emmanuel Macron and UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer to discuss restoring navigation in the Strait of Hormuz, amid renewed criticism from US President Donald Trump. Trump again said he was “not happy with Australia” for failing to assist, though he did not specify what was requested. Australian officials maintain there has been no request to join combat operations, noting Australia has contributed “defensive capacity” supporting the United Arab Emirates. Albanese reiterated there had been “no new requests”, while Defence Minister Richard Marles said none had been “specific”. The planned talks are expected to outline a potential “strictly defensive mission”, as Western allies weigh post-conflict measures to secure the vital shipping route.
>>24512409 Australia joins UK-France military mission to police Strait of Hormuz - Australia has signalled it is prepared to support a UK and France-led “strictly defensive” mission to secure the Strait of Hormuz, as Prime Minister Anthony Albanese warned the global energy crisis is already impacting domestic supply chains. Albanese said Australia was “working around the clock” and remained prepared to assist, with further talks to determine contributions following a 49-nation summit led by UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer and French President Emmanuel Macron. Australia has already deployed a Wedgetail E-7A aircraft to support defensive operations in the region. Leaders agreed reopening the strait was a “global necessity”, with plans for a mission focused on protecting shipping and mine clearance. US President Donald Trump criticised NATO allies on Truth Social, saying they were “useless when needed” and telling them to “stay away” unless they “just want to load up their ships with oil”, while confirming the US naval blockade would remain in force until a deal with Iran was complete.
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d0bc64 No.24599642
#45 - Part 18
Middle East Conflict - The Australian Perspective - Part 18
>>24512447 Albanese and Anwar find common ground in defending the Pope against Trump - Prime Minister Anthony Albanese and Malaysian Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim have united in defending Pope Leo amid criticism from US President Donald Trump, while navigating tensions over the Iran war and its economic fallout. Speaking in Kuala Lumpur, Albanese described the Pope as a “thoughtful, dignified, and extraordinary person”, in remarks widely seen as an implicit rebuke of Trump, who had denounced the pontiff on social media as “weak on crime” and “terrible for foreign policy” and posted a since-deleted AI image depicting himself as a Jesus-like figure. Anwar said both leaders shared the Pope’s “desire for peace, for justice, and for an end to atrocities”. The talks focused on fuel and food security as the Strait of Hormuz crisis disrupts global supply chains, with Malaysia offering Australia priority access to excess fuel supplies. However, Anwar also defended ties with Iran and Russia, highlighting differing geopolitical positions as both nations seek stability.
>>24518282 Australia’s plea to Iran and US as Strait of Hormuz closes again - Australia has urged Iran and the United States to intensify negotiations after the Strait of Hormuz was closed again, with Iranian forces firing on vessels just a day after reopening the key shipping route. Defence Minister Richard Marles described the escalation as a “disappointing development” and called for diplomatic efforts to turn a fragile ceasefire into a permanent resolution to restore global fuel supply chains. The closure has heightened risks to global energy markets, with ships turning back after coming under fire. US President Donald Trump accused Iran of breaching the ceasefire and warned the US could target infrastructure if a deal is not reached. Australia is preparing to assist international efforts to secure the strait while launching a $1 billion emergency loan program to support businesses affected by the fuel crisis.
>>24518286 Australia ‘hostage’ to US-Iran war with potentially ‘severe’ consequences, warns Jim Chalmers - Treasurer Jim Chalmers has warned Australia’s economy is effectively “hostage” to decisions made by the United States and Iran, with the Middle East war expected to drive higher inflation, rising unemployment and slower growth. Chalmers said the outlook depended on how quickly the Strait of Hormuz could be reopened and global conditions stabilised, noting Treasury was modelling downside scenarios including more severe economic disruptions. He described recent developments as a “wild ride”, with progress towards a ceasefire quickly reversing, adding the consequences were already “serious” and could become “severe”. The warning comes ahead of the May budget, where Chalmers confirmed curbing growth in the National Disability Insurance Scheme would form the “most important” savings measure, amid concerns the program’s rapid expansion is becoming unsustainable.
>>24518289 Fire-ravaged Geelong oil refinery charts path back to 90% output - Viva Energy expects its Geelong refinery to return to more than 90 per cent of output within weeks after a fire damaged a key processing unit, easing concerns about domestic fuel supply during the global energy crisis. The company said the blaze was confined to the alkylation unit, with other major systems unaffected, allowing production to recover to around 60 per cent for petrol and 80 per cent for diesel and jet fuel. Chief executive Scott Wyatt said imports could bridge any shortfall, with the refinery supplying up to half of Victoria’s fuel and about 10 per cent nationally. Petrol prices have begun easing, though diesel remains elevated, as the government considers extending fuel excise cuts. Officials said supply would remain stable in the short term despite ongoing global uncertainty.
>>24556580 Iran’s embassy in Canberra recruiting Australians for ‘martyrdom’ - Iran’s embassy in Canberra has removed social media posts promoting a “Janfada” or “martyrdom” campaign that encouraged supporters in Australia to register through an Iranian government portal and contribute funds to causes linked to Tehran. The Australian Federal Police said it was aware of the material, which reportedly described participation as a “sacred” act connected to self-sacrifice and loyalty to the Iranian regime. The posts appeared amid heightened tensions following Australia’s expulsion of Iran’s ambassador and senior diplomats over intelligence findings linking Tehran to antisemitic attacks in Australia. Opposition home affairs spokesman Jonno Duniam said the campaign crossed “a clear red line”, while Iranian-Australian community figures urged an investigation into whether the embassy was operating beyond its diplomatic mandate through ideologically charged messaging and fundraising activity.
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d0bc64 No.24599643
#45 - Part 19
Middle East Conflict - The Australian Perspective - Part 19
>>24556590 Penny Wong to press Asian countries for fuel guarantees during regional tour - Foreign Minister Penny Wong is pressing major Asian trading partners for assurances on fuel supplies as Australia confronts ongoing shortages linked to disruption in the Strait of Hormuz during the Iran war. During talks in Tokyo, Wong argued Australia could only continue supplying key exports such as liquified natural gas, coal and food to the region if it maintained reliable access to diesel, jet fuel, petrol and fertiliser. She said Australia wanted to remain a “reliable supplier” but needed fuel-exporting nations to “continue to be reliable” in return. Wong is also travelling to China and South Korea to discuss fuel security, trade and broader strategic issues. The visit comes as Japan reportedly raised concerns over possible Australian taxes on gas exporters and their impact on investment certainty and economic relations.
>>24556607 Chinese firms to engage Australian businesses on jet fuel sales - Chinese state-owned oil companies have begun direct discussions with Australian businesses over jet fuel sales following diplomatic negotiations led by Foreign Minister Penny Wong in Beijing. Wong described the development as an encouraging sign of co-operation after talks with Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi, as Australia seeks to avoid worsening fuel shortages linked to the Strait of Hormuz crisis. State-owned energy giant Sinopec is reportedly co-ordinating the negotiations, while China has also approved increased fuel exports for May. Wong argued Australia’s ability to continue supplying coal, liquified natural gas, iron ore and food to regional markets depended on maintaining reliable access to jet fuel and diesel. The diplomatic mission was briefly overshadowed when a Chinese official reportedly obstructed an Australian government photographer during a meeting with Vice President Han Zheng.
>>24572987 Sydney mayor bans 'globalise the intifada' forum from being held at council building - Sydney Lord Mayor Clover Moore has directed the City of Sydney chief executive to stop a “Globalise the Intifada” forum from being held at a council-owned venue, citing concerns about social cohesion during the opening hearings of the royal commission into antisemitism. The event, organised by Stop The War On Palestine, was scheduled for Tuesday night and will proceed at another location. Ms Moore said freedom of speech and protest rights must be balanced against “public safety and respect for all members of our community”. Organisers rejected claims the event promoted violence or antisemitism, while the NSW Jewish Board of Deputies welcomed the decision and described the slogan as a recognised “call to violence against Jewish Australians”.
>>24573004 Controversial ‘globalise the intifada’ event moves to park after council revokes booking - Sydney Lord Mayor Clover Moore has revoked a City of Sydney venue booking for a forum defending the phrase “globalise the intifada”, forcing organisers to relocate the event to a public park in Redfern. NSW Premier Chris Minns said the slogan was “antithetical” to the kind of community NSW wanted and described calls to “globalise the intifada” as support for a “violent uprising”. Organisers from Stop The War On Palestine condemned the cancellation and confirmed the event would proceed, with Cumberland councillor Ahmed Ouf among scheduled speakers. Ms Moore said the decision reflected concerns about “hostility and fear” during the opening week of the royal commission into antisemitism and social cohesion. NSW Opposition Leader Kellie Sloane welcomed the cancellation and called for guarantees similar events would not be hosted again.
>>24578172 Identities of Islamic State-linked families revealed ahead of return and arrest in Australia - (Video) Australian Federal Police are preparing to arrest several women linked to Islamic State when a group of four women and nine children arrives in Australia from Syria this week. The families are expected to land in Sydney and Melbourne after travelling via Doha, ending years spent in detention camps in north-east Syria following the collapse of Islamic State. Authorities said some adults would face terrorism-related charges while others remained under investigation. Australian Federal Police Commissioner Krissy Barrett said agencies had been preparing for the return of Australians linked to Syria since 2014. ASIO Director-General Mike Burgess said security agencies would continue monitoring the families after arrival. Home Affairs Minister Tony Burke said the government was not assisting the return but warned anyone who committed offences could expect “the full force of the law”.
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d0bc64 No.24599644
#45 - Part 20
Middle East Conflict - The Australian Perspective - Part 20
>>24578245 What is known about the Islamic State-linked families about to arrive in Australia - Four women and nine children linked to Islamic State fighters are expected to return to Australia from Syria this week, with authorities preparing arrests, investigations and monitoring arrangements upon arrival. The group includes Janai Safar, who travelled to Islamic State-controlled Syria in 2015, and members of the Ahmed family from Melbourne, whose male relatives allegedly joined the terrorist organisation. The families have spent years in detention camps in north-east Syria following the collapse of Islamic State. Australian Federal Police Commissioner Krissy Barrett confirmed some adults would be arrested after landing, while other investigations remained ongoing. The children will enter community integration and counter-extremism programs. ASIO Director-General Mike Burgess said security agencies would continue monitoring the group and warned authorities would act if any individuals displayed signs of extremist behaviour after returning to Australia.
>>24578252 More than $10 billion slated to boost fuel supplies and emergency stockpiles - The Albanese government will spend more than $10 billion to strengthen Australia’s fuel security and emergency reserves amid global supply disruptions linked to the Iran conflict and effective closure of the Strait of Hormuz. The package, to be detailed in next week’s budget, includes $7.5 billion in financial support enabling fuel companies to acquire and store additional stock, plus $3.7 billion to establish a government-owned reserve holding one billion litres of diesel and aviation fuel. Australia’s mandatory fuel stockholding requirements will also increase, lifting reserves of petrol, diesel and jet fuel. Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said the measures would improve “energy sovereignty” and resilience during future crises. Opposition Leader Angus Taylor welcomed expanded reserves but argued Australia should move further by increasing emergency fuel stockpiles to 60 days.
>>24579116 ISIS brides returning to Australia from Syria may face historic slavery-related charges - (Video) Two Islamic State-linked Melbourne women returning from Syria are expected to face possible crimes against humanity charges connected to allegations involving the enslavement of Yazidi women during the Syrian conflict. Kawsar Abbas and one of her adult daughters are reportedly under investigation over claims made by Yazidi women who allege they were held captive by the family while Islamic State controlled territory in Syria. Australian Federal Police Commissioner Krissy Barrett said investigators had gathered evidence relating to terrorism offences and alleged slave trading crimes. Another returning woman, Janai Safar, may face charges linked to entering or remaining in a declared terrorist area. Legal experts said any prosecution could become the first Australian case involving crimes against humanity charges connected to alleged Islamic State atrocities committed overseas.
>>24583922 Crimes against humanity: Three returning ISIS brides charged over slave and terror offences - (Video) Three Australian women linked to Islamic State have been charged after returning from Syria, including two Melbourne women accused of crimes against humanity involving the alleged enslavement of Yazidi women. Kawsar Abbas and her daughter Zeinab were arrested at Melbourne Airport and charged with offences including enslavement, possessing a slave and engaging in slave trading, carrying penalties of up to 25 years’ imprisonment. Sydney woman Janai Safar was separately charged with entering or remaining in a declared terrorist area and allegedly joining Islamic State. Authorities allege the offences occurred while the women lived under the Islamic State caliphate in Syria after travelling there in 2014 and 2015. Legal experts said the prosecutions were historically significant because Australian crimes against humanity laws had never previously been tested in domestic courts.
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d0bc64 No.24599645
#45 - Part 21
Middle East Conflict - The Australian Perspective - Part 21
>>24584029 Albanese declares ‘zero sympathy’ for ISIS brides as Yazidi community lives in fear - (Video) Prime Minister Anthony Albanese says he has “zero sympathy” for Australians who travelled to join Islamic State, after three women returning from Syria were charged with terrorism and slavery-related offences. Members of Australia’s Yazidi community said the arrivals had retraumatised survivors of Islamic State atrocities and renewed fears of encountering former captors in Australia. Melbourne women Kawsar Abbas and Zeinab Ahmad were charged with crimes against humanity offences linked to the alleged enslavement of Yazidi women, while Sydney woman Janai Safar was charged with entering a declared terrorist area and joining Islamic State. Albanese defended Australia’s decision to allow the women to return under the rule of law, while stressing sympathy for the children involved. Legal experts described the slavery-related prosecutions as unprecedented in Australian legal history.
>>24586892 ‘I want them to be punished’: Alleged Yazidi slave on ISIS brides - (Video) A Yazidi woman who alleges she was enslaved by an Australian Islamic State-linked family in Syria says she wants those responsible “to be punished” after Melbourne women Kawsar Abbas and Zeinab Ahmad were charged with slavery-related crimes against humanity offences. The woman, identified under a pseudonym, alleged she was bought and held by the family for 18 months while living under the Islamic State caliphate, where she claims she was forced into domestic servitude and repeatedly raped by family patriarch Mohammad Ahmad. Ahmad has denied the allegations. The charges are believed to form part of Australia’s first domestic prosecution involving crimes against humanity linked to Islamic State atrocities against the Yazidi minority. Both alleged victims have reportedly told Australian Federal Police they are willing to testify in court proceedings.
>>24592971 ISIS widows drop bid for freedom over alleged Yazidi slave trading - Former Islamic State-linked women Kawsar Abbas and Zeinab Ahmad will remain in custody after shelving plans for an immediate bail application over allegations they enslaved Yazidi women while living under the Islamic State caliphate in Syria. The mother and daughter were arrested after arriving at Melbourne Airport last week following their repatriation from the al-Roj detention camp. Prosecutors allege Abbas helped purchase a Yazidi woman for $US10,000 and knowingly kept her as a slave, while Ahmad is accused of enslavement and using a slave. The offences are classified as crimes against humanity and carry maximum penalties of 25 years’ imprisonment. Ahmad is scheduled to apply for bail in June, followed later by her mother. Another daughter, Zahra Ahmad, was released without charges after returning to Australia.
>>24592977 ISIS-linked mother and daughter Kawsar Ahmad and Zeinab Ahmad reveal new bail effort on slavery charges - (Video) Islamic State-linked mother and daughter Kawsar Ahmad and Zeinab Ahmad have abandoned plans for an immediate bail application after being charged with slavery-related crimes against humanity offences following their return to Australia from Syria. Prosecutors allege the pair exercised control over a Yazidi woman held in conditions akin to slavery between 2017 and 2018 while living under the Islamic State caliphate in Syria’s Deir ez-Zur province. Kawsar Ahmad is charged with enslavement, possessing a slave, using a slave and engaging in slave trading, while Zeinab Ahmad faces enslavement and using a slave charges. Both women will remain in custody until separate bail hearings next month. The court has also imposed interim suppression orders protecting the identity of alleged victims and a proposed prosecution witness.
>>24592865 Victoria Police abandon claims ‘all Zionists are terrorists’ chant by activist Hash Tayeh are antisemitic - Victoria Police has narrowed its prosecution case against pro-Palestinian activist Hash Tayeh, conceding it will no longer argue chants of “all Zionists are terrorists” were antisemitic. Mr Tayeh faces multiple offensive language charges linked to pro-Palestinian protests in Melbourne during 2024 and 2025, alongside co-accused Jad Awwad Abu Alsendyan. Prosecutors told the Melbourne Magistrates Court the case would instead focus solely on whether the chant constituted “insulting words” under the Summary Offences Act and whether the accused intended the words to be insulting. Police also opposed defence attempts to introduce expert evidence about Zionism’s history and distinctions between Judaism and Zionism. Earlier this year, the Victorian Civil and Administrative Tribunal separately ruled the chant breached racial and religious vilification laws by inciting hatred against Jewish people.
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d0bc64 No.24599646
#45 - Part 22
Bondi Beach Massacre Aftermath - Part 1
>>24354950 Commissioner assures Bondi families she will probe Hanukkah security, police delays - Royal commission head Virginia Bell has assured survivors and families of the Bondi Beach massacre that the inquiry will examine the police response to the attack and security arrangements at the Hanukkah celebration where 15 people were killed. During a private meeting with about 80 survivors, witnesses and relatives at Bondi, Bell said the commission would investigate “how long it took police to respond” and why only two officers were present at the Chanukah by the Sea event. She also explained the inquiry could not hear eyewitness accounts that might prejudice the criminal trial of alleged gunmen Naveed and Sajid Akram. The Albanese government said it would introduce legislation granting legal immunity for intelligence and operational information provided to the commission.
>>24359696 Trump officials ‘asked why Australian Jews aren’t carrying guns’ - Trump administration officials have questioned whether Australia’s Jewish community should be armed following the Bondi Beach terrorist attack, highlighting Washington’s close scrutiny of antisemitism and security responses in Australia. Executive Council of Australian Jewry co-chief executive Alex Ryvchin said US officials, including President Donald Trump’s antisemitism envoy Rabbi Yehuda Kaploun, asked why Australian Jews were not carrying firearms after the December massacre in which 15 people were killed. Ryvchin said he replied that widespread gun ownership “is just not part of our culture”, reflecting Australia’s strict firearms laws and different security mindset. The NSW government is examining whether the Community Security Group, which protects Jewish institutions, should be allowed to carry additional arms at public events. The Albanese government has launched a royal commission and security reviews following the attack.
>>24360122 Accused Bondi gunman Naveed Akram wants a gag order to protect his family - Alleged Bondi Beach terrorist Naveed Akram has sought a suppression order to prevent publication of identifying details about his mother, brother and sister, arguing publicity surrounding the case could endanger their safety. Barrister Richard Wilson SC told a Sydney court the application aimed to shield the family’s identities, home address and associated school or workplace details from public reporting as the case draws international attention. Magistrate Greg Grogin granted interim orders and scheduled a priority hearing, noting there appeared to be “no reason” relatives should be drawn into the “arena” of the trial, but questioned whether privacy protections could still be effective given extensive existing reporting. Akram faces 15 murder charges over the Hanukkah attack, alongside attempted murder and terrorism-related offences.
>>24371525 ‘I was surplus to requirements’: PM’s top security expert Dennis Richardson quits antisemitism royal commission - (Video) Former ASIO director-general Dennis Richardson has resigned from the antisemitism royal commission, saying he concluded he was “surplus to requirements” after his independent review into intelligence and law enforcement was folded into the inquiry’s legal framework. Richardson said the structure limited his ability to deliver the type of timely, security-focused recommendations he believed were necessary following the Bondi massacre. He described his role as effectively that of a “research officer” despite being paid $5500 a day, raising concerns about value and purpose. The resignation has sparked criticism from the Coalition, which warned the move undermines the credibility of the inquiry. The government said the commission remains independent, while commissioner Virginia Bell maintained work on an interim report into security agency responses was well advanced.
>>24371534 Intelligence agencies say they’ll struggle to give full evidence to Bondi royal commission; Dennis Richardson ‘felt like the fifth wheel’ - (Video) Australian intelligence and law enforcement agencies have warned they may be unable to provide full evidence to the antisemitism royal commission due to legal and secrecy constraints, as former ASIO chief Dennis Richardson said he resigned after feeling like a “fifth wheel”. AUSTRAC said its chief retains final authority over disclosures due to international obligations, while the Australian Federal Police confirmed it had redacted material and faced legislative barriers in sharing telecommunications data. The Australian Criminal Intelligence Commission and ASIO also flagged limits on disclosure. Richardson said the inquiry’s legal structure reduced his role to that of a “research officer”, raising concerns about the commission’s effectiveness.
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d0bc64 No.24599647
#45 - Part 23
Bondi Beach Massacre Aftermath - Part 2
>>24371545 Clash over security report led to sudden resignation from royal commission - A dispute over the timing and scope of security recommendations following the Bondi massacre has led to the resignation of former ASIO chief Dennis Richardson from the antisemitism royal commission. Richardson had been preparing detailed findings on intelligence and policing failures for the interim report, but commissioner Virginia Bell opted to defer substantive recommendations until the final report due in December. Sources said Richardson believed delaying urgent security advice risked missing an opportunity to act, while Bell prioritised meeting deadlines and further evidence gathering. Richardson said his role had been reduced to that of a “highly paid researcher” and that his “value-add” was limited. The disagreement has raised concerns about the commission’s direction and its ability to deliver timely national security outcomes.
>>24386759 Error of judgment: Swans admit to script change before pre-game Bondi tribute - Sydney Swans chief executive Matthew Pavlich has admitted the club changed a pre-game Bondi tribute script to remove specific reference to the Jewish community, calling it an “error of judgment” made internally in an effort to use “inclusive language”. The club said the Australian Football League was not involved in the decision, after earlier questions about whether the omission had been directed externally. Pavlich said he took “full responsibility” for the wording used before the March 5 season-opener against Carlton, and the Swans apologised again for failing to specifically name the Jewish community. Liberal senator James Paterson said the admission raised concerns about “deeply ingrained cultural problems” in sporting institutions, while Rabbi Mendy Litzman said the Swans had made affected families and community representatives feel “very loved and welcomed”.
>>24386771 AFL referred to Royal Commission over removal of Jewish community references from Bondi tribute - The Sydney Swans have admitted they removed references to the “Jewish community” from a pre-match Bondi tribute script and said the change was made internally without any direction from the Australian Football League. The omission prompted Victorian Liberal senator James Paterson to refer the league to the Royal Commission into Antisemitism and Social Cohesion, urging commissioner Virginia Bell to request that the AFL preserve documents and communications so witnesses can be examined about “who ordered the removal” and why. The Swans said the wording was changed in an attempt to use “inclusive language” focused on the “whole community”, but acknowledged this was an “error of judgement” and apologised again. Paterson said “erasing” the victims’ Jewish identity was “a travesty and an insult” to their families.
>>24391086 Bondi terrorist hangs head as vigilante threats against family revealed - Accused Bondi attacker Naveed Akram has appeared in court as his lawyer said his mother and siblings were “under siege” and “living in fear” after receiving vigilante threats and harassment following the alleged December attack. Defence barrister Richard Wilson sought final suppression orders to force the removal of identifying details about Akram’s mother, brother, sister and home, arguing they were not accused of any wrongdoing and had faced threats including calls to “torch the house”, abuse, suspected intimidation and damage. Barrister Matt Lewis, SC, for media organisations opposing the bid, said it was “futile” because the family’s identities were already widely known and argued open justice was vital as the public sought confidence the case would be handled transparently. A decision is due on April 2.
>>24429028 Bondi hero Ahmed Al Ahmed awarded symbolic key to the city and recognised for bravery during terror attack - Bondi attack survivor Ahmed Al Ahmed has been honoured with a key to the city and lifetime beach parking pass for his actions during the December 14 terror attack. The 43-year-old was filmed confronting a gunman and disarming him before being shot, in an incident that left 15 people dead at a Hanukkah event. New South Wales Premier Chris Minns said his actions “showed … what true Australian courage looks like”, while Waverley Mayor Will Nemesh described his response as “unflinching resolve”. Governor Margaret Beazley called it “courage beyond courage”. Ahmed said his “heart cries” for the victims but urged unity, saying Australians must “stand with each other” in the face of violence.
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d0bc64 No.24599649
#45 - Part 24
Bondi Beach Massacre Aftermath - Part 3
>>24459136 Alleged Bondi shooter Naveed Akram’s bid to hide family’s identity denied by judge - (Video) A New South Wales judge has rejected alleged Bondi attacker Naveed Akram’s request for a 40-year suppression order to protect his family’s identities, ruling the order would be ineffective and not justified under open justice principles. The court heard the family had faced threats and harassment, including claims of vandalism and intimidation, but Judge Hugh Donnelly said such orders apply only in “exceptional circumstances” and this case did not meet that threshold. He noted “no one has been assaulted” and that claims of psychological harm lacked expert evidence. The judge also found the order would be “ineffective, futile and not enforceable”, particularly as identifying details were already known and some had entered the public domain. The court emphasised the need for the case to be “fairly reported”.
>>24502427 Military protection of Jewish sites urged in submission to antisemitism royal commission - A submission to the antisemitism royal commission has called for permanent security, including potential military protection, at Jewish schools, synagogues and community sites, citing ongoing safety concerns. Advocacy group StandWithUs Australia argued current arrangements are insufficient, urging a government-backed model similar to European systems where armed personnel guard institutions. Executive director Michael Gencher said security had become part of “day-to-day operational planning” and warned delays risk missing opportunities for immediate reform. Sydney Great Synagogue chief rabbi Benjamin Elton said military deployment “should definitely be on the table”, pointing to overseas examples. The proposal would require significant legal changes to allow routine domestic deployment of defence forces, as the commission continues to examine responses to rising antisemitism and broader community safety concerns.
>>24502430 Bondi royal commission to run through first half of May - The Antisemitism and Social Cohesion Royal Commission will hold its first public hearings from May 4 to 15, focusing on defining antisemitism, its historical and contemporary forms, and the lived experiences of Jewish Australians. The hearings will follow an interim report examining national security agencies and potential intelligence failures linked to the Bondi attack. Commissioner Virginia Bell said testimony from affected individuals would be central to the inquiry, while community leaders said the process would highlight incidents including attacks on synagogues and harassment. Local and national figures have framed the hearings as a key step in addressing rising antisemitism and strengthening social cohesion, with further policy discussions expected as the commission continues its work.
>>24505952 NSW’s post-Bondi protest laws struck down by court - (Video) Criminal charges against 26 protesters are in doubt after the NSW Court of Appeal struck down sweeping anti-protest laws introduced after the Bondi terror attack, ruling they unlawfully restricted political communication. Chief Justice Andrew Bell said the laws “impermissibly burden” the implied freedom of political communication, adding democratic systems accept “disharmony, incivility and disruption” as part of public debate. The legislation had allowed police to ban moving protests for up to 90 days after a terrorist event and was used during demonstrations against Israeli President Isaac Herzog’s visit. Palestine Action Group organiser Josh Lees hailed the ruling as “a big win” for protest rights and civil liberties, while legal representatives said prosecutions were likely to fail. Premier Chris Minns said he was “obviously disappointed”, defending the laws as necessary in response to the attack.
>>24515519 Protesters arrested at Brisbane pro-Palestine rally featuring banned phrase - (Video) Police have arrested 20 people at a pro-Palestine rally in Brisbane after protesters chanted and displayed phrases banned under Queensland’s new hate speech laws. Hundreds gathered near the Supreme Court to oppose the legislation, with arrests made after a banner reading “from the river to the sea” was unveiled and later removed by officers. Authorities laid 14 charges for displaying a prohibited expression and seven for reciting one, with the laws outlawing certain phrases when used to menace or offend. Premier David Crisafulli said people were free to protest but not to call for others to be “erased, eradicated, exterminated”. The arrests follow earlier charges under the laws, including one against a protester outside Parliament House last month.
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d0bc64 No.24599650
#45 - Part 25
Bondi Beach Massacre Aftermath - Part 4
>>24531154 Islamic State urges followers to copy Bondi shooters in new propaganda - Islamic State has urged supporters to replicate the Bondi attack in Sydney, praising the perpetrators and presenting the killings as a model for further violence in its Voice of Khurasan newsletter, according to new propaganda material. The Afghanistan-based Islamic State Khorasan branch promoted the December attack in its English-language publication, encouraging followers to carry out similar acts and framing the violence as part of a broader ideological campaign. Australian security experts warn the material reflects patterns seen in previous waves of extremist activity, with propaganda acting as a trigger for lone-actor attacks. Analysts say the messaging highlights ongoing risks from radicalisation both online and in-person, prompting calls for stronger measures to restrict extremist preachers and limit the spread of violent ideology within Australia’s national security framework.
>>24531161 Resplendent heroism': Bondi Beach massacre glorified by ISIS in seven-page propaganda spread - Islamic State has glorified the Bondi Beach attack as “resplendent heroism” in a seven-page feature in its Voice of Khurasan newsletter, urging supporters to follow the example and framing the killings as a model for further violence. The Islamic State Khorasan branch publication praised the attackers and described the incident as a demonstration of tactics for broader ideological objectives, while criticising Muslims who condemned the attack. Security analysts warn such propaganda mirrors material linked to past extremist activity, reinforcing concerns about its role in inspiring lone-actor attacks. The development comes amid heightened domestic concern about antisemitism and ongoing national security risks, with Australia’s terrorism threat level set at “probable”, indicating authorities assess a continued likelihood of attack planning or activity.
>>24544663 Jews should not be required to pay ‘safety tax’: Royal commission swamped with submissions - Australia’s royal commission into antisemitism has received more than 3500 submissions detailing experiences across education, health, employment, media, sport, the arts and online platforms following the Bondi terrorist attack. The commission’s interim report, due next week, will examine security agency responses and potential intelligence failures linked to the mass shooting at a Hanukkah event in December, in which 15 mostly Jewish people were killed. Commissioner Virginia Bell said the inquiry would avoid prejudicing criminal proceedings against alleged gunman Naveed Akram. Some submissions have called for stronger government-funded protections for Jewish communities and institutions. King David School principal Marc Light argued Jewish Australians should not face a “safety tax”, while advocacy group StandWithUs proposed permanent protective security at Jewish sites and schools.
>>24544690 Authorities suspect Gaza war drove Bondi shooter to terror - Australian authorities suspect anger over Israel’s war in Gaza helped drive Bondi attacker Sajid Akram towards violent Islamic extremism, with investigators alleging he played a major role in planning the December massacre that killed 15 people at a Hanukkah event. Security and police sources said Sajid’s Islamic State-influenced ideology intensified during the Gaza conflict and that he allegedly directed efforts to avoid electronic communication and law enforcement detection. Separate classified reviews reportedly found no major intelligence failure by the Australian Federal Police or the Australian Security Intelligence Organisation in their earlier assessments of Naveed Akram. However, officials and former ASIO director-general Dennis Richardson are said to have raised concerns about whether Australia’s counter-terrorism settings, intelligence scrutiny and resourcing were sufficiently strengthened after the national terror threat level was raised in 2024.
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d0bc64 No.24599651
#45 - Part 26
Bondi Beach Massacre Aftermath - Part 5
>>24544697 Scepticism after federal agencies clear themselves over Bondi attack - Reviews clearing the Australian Federal Police and the Australian Security Intelligence Organisation of failures before the Bondi terror attack have been met with scepticism by stakeholders preparing for the antisemitism royal commission. Separate inquiries reportedly concluded the AFP properly handled intelligence before the December massacre and that ASIO’s 2019 assessment of Naveed Akram as not adhering to violent extremism was reasonable at the time. However, critics and national security figures said those findings should be closely examined by the royal commission led by former High Court justice Virginia Bell. Former Home Affairs secretary Michael Pezzullo said broader questions remained about whether counter-terrorism resources and intelligence scrutiny were sufficiently increased after the Gaza conflict and the raising of Australia’s terror threat level in 2024. The commission has received more than 3500 submissions.
>>24556735 Age legend Michael Gawenda to air left-wing media’s failure on antisemitism at royal commission - Former The Age editor Michael Gawenda is expected to tell the antisemitism royal commission that major Australian media organisations failed to adequately report on rising antisemitism following the October 7 attacks on Israel. Gawenda plans to criticise “the left liberal media”, including The Age, Sydney Morning Herald, ABC and Guardian, arguing they minimised the impact of antisemitism on Jewish Australians and elevated fringe voices over mainstream Jewish opinion. He also said he had lost friendships and publishing opportunities because of his support for Israel. The royal commission’s interim report, focused on intelligence and security matters linked to the Bondi attack, is expected to contain heavy redactions for national security reasons. Public hearings beginning next month will examine lived experiences of antisemitism across education, media, health, employment and other sectors.
>>24556912 REVEALED: Bondi terror attack Royal Commission delivers 14 interim recommendations, with five withheld and confidential - (Video) The Royal Commission into Antisemitism and Social Cohesion has delivered 14 interim recommendations following the Bondi Beach terror attack, warning Australia’s counter-terrorism system may have faced resourcing pressures while the national threat level remained “probable”. Nine recommendations were publicly released, while five remain classified for national security reasons. The report called for increased police protection at high-risk Jewish events, annual counter-terrorism briefings to National Cabinet, updated crisis-management procedures and nationally consistent gun reforms, including a proposed buyback scheme. Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said the National Security Committee had accepted all Commonwealth recommendations and would work with states on implementation. Public hearings beginning next week will examine antisemitism, lived experiences within the Jewish community and the prevalence of antisemitic incidents across Australian institutions and society.
>>24556922 Terror training for PM, national cabinet among 14 recommendations in Bell report - (Video) Royal commissioner Virginia Bell has recommended major reviews of Australia’s counter-terrorism systems following the Bondi massacre, including terrorism response exercises for the Prime Minister and National Cabinet ministers. The interim report into the Bondi attack found counter-terrorism capabilities at federal and state levels “could be improved”, despite concluding no agency had identified urgent failures that would have prevented the attack. Public recommendations included stronger protection for Jewish community events, a review of Joint Counter-Terrorism Teams, improved intelligence sharing and nationally consistent gun reforms. Justice Bell also highlighted concerns around police resourcing and risk assessments linked to the Chanukah by the Sea event targeted in December. Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said the government would implement all Commonwealth recommendations and respond to classified findings through further security and policy measures.
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d0bc64 No.24599652
#45 - Part 27
Bondi Beach Massacre Aftermath - Part 6
>>24556937 NSW Police did no risk assessment before Chanukah attack, says Commission - The antisemitism royal commission has found NSW Police provided no written risk assessment for the Chanukah by the Sea event targeted in the Bondi terrorist attack, despite warnings from Jewish security groups that the threat level facing the community was “high”. Commissioner Virginia Bell’s interim report said police resource decisions were informed by a “risk assessment process”, but no formal document had been supplied to the inquiry. NSW Police Commissioner Mal Lanyon insisted an assessment had been undertaken using intelligence from the Jewish Community Security Group, which had requested police support for the event. The report also revealed differences between police and community organisers over expected security arrangements. Potential failures involving intelligence handling and police resourcing before the attack will be examined during upcoming public hearings of the royal commission.
>>24556944 ‘Incubated in hatred’: Warnings, risks laid bare as Bondi royal commission zeroes in on security flaws - The Bondi royal commission will examine whether intelligence agencies and police adequately responded to repeated warnings about a likely antisemitic terror attack before the December massacre that killed 15 people at a Hanukkah event. Commissioner Virginia Bell’s interim report revealed NSW Police were advised by the Jewish Community Security Group that the threat level facing the Jewish community was “HIGH”, but officers assigned to the event were reportedly told there was “no need to stay the entire duration”. NSW Premier Chris Minns described the findings as “sobering” and said the attack had been “incubated in hatred”. The report also raised concerns about declining counter-terrorism investment despite Australia’s terror threat level being raised to “probable” in 2024, with further scrutiny of intelligence agencies and police planned during upcoming public hearings.
>>24569462 Justice for the dead, freedom from the ‘worst of us’: Alex Ryvchin takes royal commission stand - (Video) Executive Council of Australian Jewry co-chief executive Alex Ryvchin is set to urge the royal commission into antisemitism and social cohesion to confront what he describes as a “flaccid mindset” that has allowed extremism and antisemitism to spread in Australia. Mr Ryvchin will be the first major community leader to give evidence at the inquiry led by former High Court justice Virginia Bell, which begins public hearings this week. The hearings will examine the rise in antisemitic incidents following the October 7 attacks in Israel and the December 2025 Bondi terror attack. Mr Ryvchin said the commission was about securing “justice for the dead” and ensuring hatred and violence were not inflicted on other Australians. Other witnesses include Bondi victim Reuven Morrison’s daughter Sheina Gutnick, rabbis, community leaders and victims of antisemitism.
>>24569474 Hearings begin: Royal commission into antisemitism told of 'real-world consequences of hatred - (Video) A Holocaust survivor and relatives of Bondi terror victims have told the royal commission into antisemitism and social cohesion that rising hatred has left many Jewish Australians fearful for their safety and identity. Peter Halasz OAM said he never expected to again feel afraid wearing his Star of David in public after surviving Nazi persecution in Hungary during World War II. Witnesses described online abuse, threats against children, anti-Semitic incidents in schools and hostility near synagogues following the October 7 attacks in Israel and the December 2025 Bondi massacre. Executive Council of Australian Jewry co-chief executive Alex Ryvchin said extremists “go exactly as far as they're permitted to go”, while commissioner Virginia Bell said the sharp rise in antisemitism mirrored trends across other Western countries during the commission's opening hearings.
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d0bc64 No.24599653
#45 - Part 28
Bondi Beach Massacre Aftermath - Part 7
>>24572941 Jewish Council wins role to challenge antisemitism definition at royal commission - The Jewish Council of Australia has secured limited standing at the royal commission into antisemitism and social cohesion, allowing it to challenge expert evidence relating to the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance (IHRA) definition of antisemitism. Former High Court justice Virginia Bell granted the pro-Palestine Jewish organisation leave to appear specifically on issues involving the IHRA definition and survey evidence concerning antisemitic attitudes in Australia. The IHRA definition, adopted by the federal government, has drawn criticism from some groups who argue it risks conflating anti-Zionism with antisemitism. Commissioner Bell said some criticisms reflected a “misconception”, noting alleged antisemitic conduct must always be assessed “in its overall context”. The commission’s first hearings are examining lived experiences of antisemitism, with later sessions to focus on the Bondi terror attack, social media, tertiary education and deradicalisation processes.
>>24572962 Royal Commission told anti-Semitism ‘interlaced’ with actions of Israel - Australia’s royal commission into antisemitism and social cohesion has heard evidence that anti-Semitic incidents in Australia are increasingly linked to perceptions about Israel and the war in Gaza, despite Jewish Australians having “no agency” over Israeli government actions. Executive Council of Australian Jewry co-chief executive Peter Wertheim said many Jewish Australians were shocked by the response to the October 7 Hamas attacks, including anti-Semitic slurs heard during a pro-Palestinian rally outside the Sydney Opera House. SBS director Vic Alhadeff said anti-Semitism was often “interlaced” with events in the Middle East, while stressing Jewish Australians should not be blamed for decisions made by Israel. Melbourne school principal Jeremy Stowe-Lindner told the inquiry his students had experienced an “avalanche” of anti-Semitic incidents since late 2023, including graffiti, verbal abuse and spitting attacks.
>>24576344 Social media giant fails to act as Jewish community fears ‘next Bondi’ - Witnesses at the royal commission into antisemitism and social cohesion have described growing fear within Australia’s Jewish community, including concerns about further violence following the December 2025 Bondi terror attack. Academic Tali Pinsky told the inquiry Meta failed to remove Facebook posts glorifying Adolf Hitler and spreading antisemitic conspiracy theories after complaints were lodged, with responses stating the content did not breach “community standards”. SBS director and former NSW Jewish Board of Deputies chief executive Vic Alhadeff said many Jewish Australians feared “the next Bondi”. Other witnesses described school bullying, online abuse, heightened security around Jewish schools and community events, and children being exposed to antisemitic slurs linked to the October 7 Hamas attacks and the war in Gaza. Meta said it remained committed to removing hateful content and improving enforcement systems.
>>24576398 Antisemites ‘blur the lines’ to attack Jewish identity, royal commission told - Arnold Bloch Leibler partner Jeremy Leibler has told the royal commission into antisemitism and social cohesion that antisemites deliberately “blur the lines” between criticism of Israel and attacks on Jewish identity, leaving many Jewish Australians feeling excluded from workplaces, universities and cultural institutions after the October 7 Hamas attacks. Mr Leibler said Jewish Australians discovered acceptance in some sectors was “conditional” on rejecting Zionism and support for a Jewish homeland. Other witnesses described antisemitic abuse in schools, including Nazi salutes, “dirty Jew” slurs and students being targeted during excursions. A 13-year-old girl who attended a bat mitzvah at Bondi Pavilion during the December 2025 terror attack told the commission she remained traumatised after seeing crowds fleeing in panic. Witnesses also criticised institutions for allegedly failing to properly respond to complaints of antisemitic behaviour.
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d0bc64 No.24599654
#45 - Part 29
Bondi Beach Massacre Aftermath - Part 8
>>24576463 Man arrested after wearing Nazi swastika T-shirt outside antisemitism royal commission - (Video) A man has been arrested after allegedly wearing a T-shirt displaying a Nazi swastika and anti-Semitic slogan outside the antisemitism royal commission hearings in Sydney. NSW Police said officers attached to Operation Shelter initially issued the man with a move-on direction outside the Clarence Street venue before later arresting him at Manly Police Station. The man, who identified himself to media as Ian Minus, questioned why he was being confronted and linked his actions to opposition to Israel’s conduct in Gaza. The royal commission said it was “appalled” by the incident and stressed witness safety remained paramount during hearings. Under NSW law, publicly displaying Nazi symbols without reasonable excuse is a criminal offence, along with behaving offensively near a public place or school.
>>24577960 Alleged Bondi shooter Naveed Akram is set to be hit with 19 new charges, including attempted murder - Alleged Bondi Beach gunman Naveed Akram is expected to face 19 additional charges, including attempted murder offences, over the December 2025 antisemitic terror attack. Akram already faces 59 charges, including terrorism, 15 counts of murder and 40 counts of attempted murder. Court records show the additional allegations include shooting with intent to murder, wounding with intent to murder and firearm offences linked to resisting arrest, although police have not yet formally served the new charges. Akram has not entered pleas to any charges. During a brief court mention in Sydney, prosecutors successfully sought an extension of interim suppression orders protecting the identities of some victims, including children, while consultations continue over possible long-term non-publication orders. Akram’s next court appearance is scheduled for June.
>>24577984 ‘Critical gap’: The 2020 warning to police before Bondi terrorist bought guns - NSW Police were warned in 2020 about a “critical gap” in Australia’s firearms licensing system that could allow extremists to legally obtain weapons before alleged Bondi attacker Sajid Akram acquired guns used in the December 2025 massacre. Psychologist and gun club official Daniel Gregg told police that gun clubs needed clearer systems for identifying and reporting concerning behaviour among members, arguing “static checks” alone could not detect evolving extremist risks. His briefing referenced the Christchurch terrorist attack and warned lone-actor extremists often displayed warning signs before acting. The revelations come after the royal commission into the Bondi attack urged governments to strengthen gun laws and improve information-sharing between agencies. Police insiders also said firearms licensing divisions across Australia remained under-resourced and overwhelmed by growing workloads.
>>24592829 ‘If I wanted to succeed, would I have to again hide part of myself’: antisemitism royal commission hears of lost livelihoods - Jewish Australians told the antisemitism royal commission they lost careers, friendships and workplace security following the October 7 Hamas attacks and the subsequent Gaza conflict. Witnesses including unionists, journalists, health workers and business owners described discrimination, social exclusion and fear linked to their Jewish identity or support for Israel. One anonymous witness said her employer encouraged her to adopt a less “Jewish-sounding” name to avoid problems with clients, while former Age editor Michael Gawenda warned Jewish journalists with “complicated and nuanced” views could struggle to advance professionally. Lewis’ Continental Kitchen owners Judith and Karyn Lewis described the emotional impact of their restaurant being firebombed during Sydney’s “summer of terror”. Several witnesses also criticised institutions including universities, media organisations and NSW Health for failing to adequately respond to antisemitism concerns.
>>24592837 Mother charged over alleged antisemitic incident at netball game in Sydney's east - (Video) A 42-year-old woman has been charged after allegedly directing antisemitic abuse at a junior netball match in Sydney’s east, prompting intervention from Executive Council of Australian Jewry co-chief executive Alex Ryvchin. Police allege the woman made offensive remarks during an under-12s game between Saints and Maccabi netball clubs at Heffron courts in Maroubra. She was charged with using offensive language in a public place and is due to appear before Waverley Local Court in June. NSW Netball has banned her from attending or participating in matches. Mr Ryvchin said Jewish families should be able to attend children’s sport “with pride and pleasure” rather than fear. Saints Netball Club condemned the alleged remarks and apologised to the Jewish community and those affected.
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d0bc64 No.24599655
#45 - Part 30
Bondi Beach Massacre Aftermath - Part 9
>>24592848 Jewish leader Alex Ryvchin told to ‘just deal with’ alleged antisemitic abuse at netball game - (Video) New footage has emerged showing Executive Council of Australian Jewry co-chief executive Alex Ryvchin arguing with a bystander after an alleged antisemitic incident at a junior netball match in Sydney’s east. The confrontation followed claims a woman shouted antisemitic remarks, including “you should have been eradicated”, during an under-12s game between Saints and Maccabi clubs at Heffron Park in Maroubra. In the video, the unidentified man tells Mr Ryvchin to “just deal with it” and accuses him of escalating the situation. The exchange intensified when the man attempted to knock away a phone being used to record the interaction. The 42-year-old woman accused of making the remarks has been charged with offensive language and banned by NSW Netball from attending matches.
>>24592858 Jewish teen subjected to antisemitic slurs on Minecraft, royal commission told - A Perth teenager told the antisemitism royal commission he was subjected to antisemitic abuse by fellow students while playing Minecraft, including messages stating “I hate Jews” and describing him as a “filthy penny sniffer”. The 15-year-old said the online abuse left him isolated and distressed, prompting his parents to report the incident to his public school, which later facilitated apologies from the students involved. The commission also heard evidence from Rabbi Menachem Dadon, whose daughter was injured in the Bondi terror attack, and from Executive Council of Australian Jewry research director Julie Nathan regarding rising antisemitic incidents nationwide. Melbourne musician Joshua Moshe described losing work opportunities, online harassment and vandalism after raising concerns about antisemitism within creative industry circles following the October 7 Hamas attacks and subsequent Gaza conflict.
>>24596591 ‘Is this 2023 Australia, or 1933 Berlin?’ Deborah Conway stunned by pro-Palestinian protesters - (Video) Singer-songwriter Deborah Conway told the antisemitism royal commission she lost performance opportunities and faced hostile protests because of her support for Israel following the October 7 Hamas attacks. Conway described being shouted at during concerts and writers’ festivals, while recalling shock at pro-Palestinian demonstrations outside the Sydney Opera House in October 2023. Jewish musician Joshua Moshe also described online harassment, threats and vandalism after a WhatsApp group for Jewish creatives was leaked publicly. The commission heard further evidence from Jewish Australians describing antisemitic abuse in schools, workplaces and public life. Rabbi Daniel Rabin said some members of Melbourne’s Jewish community had begun questioning whether they should leave Australia, while Rabbi Menachem Dadon recounted his daughter asking why Jews were “hated so much” after surviving the Bondi terror attack.
>>24596665 Jewish singer-songwriter Deborah Conway names Offspring actress Alicia Gardiner as the author of a vicious letter-writing, boycott campaign against her - (Video) Singer-songwriter Deborah Conway has told the antisemitism royal commission that actress Alicia Gardiner led a campaign urging venues to boycott her performances over Conway’s public support for Israel. Conway alleged letters sent to venues described her as a “supporter of genocide”, resulting in several cancelled shows. She also described protests outside venues, including masked demonstrators carrying “globalise the intifada” signs and pounding on windows during appearances. Conway said two of her daughters were also targeted, including one who allegedly lost industry friendships and another who faced abuse while selling food at markets. The commission additionally heard evidence from Jewish musician Joshua Moshe about threats made against his family after he was doxxed online, while Rabbi Daniel Rabin and Rabbi Menachem Dadon described growing fear within Jewish communities following the October 7 Hamas attacks and subsequent tensions in Australia.
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d0bc64 No.24599656
#45 - Part 31
Australian Politics and Society - Part 1
>>24360128 Australians reach for VPNs, find porn sites blocked as online age-restrictions take effect - Australians have begun downloading virtual private networks (VPNs) in large numbers as new online age-verification laws restricting minors’ access to adult content take effect nationwide. App store data showed three of the 15 most downloaded free smartphone apps were VPN services, with VPN – Super Unlimited Proxy ranking ahead of any social media platform. The measures require pornography websites to verify users are over 18 and compel AI-powered chatbot services to block harmful content from minors or face fines of up to A$49.5 million. Canada-based company Aylo responded by blocking Australian access to RedTube and YouPorn and limiting Pornhub to a version without explicit content. eSafety Commissioner Julie Inman Grant said the changes aim to bring the same protections for children online as those expected offline.
>>24363939 ‘I’m buggered and I’ve had enough’: David Littleproud quits as federal Nationals leader - (Video) Nationals leader David Littleproud has announced he will step down, saying he is “buggered” after months of internal conflict and political pressure within the party and the Coalition. Littleproud said he would remain the member for Maranoa but had lost the energy to continue leading after intense criticism and factional disputes. A leadership contest will be held with Matt Canavan, Kevin Hogan and Bridget McKenzie declaring their intention to run, while former deputy prime minister Michael McCormack is also considering a bid. Littleproud said he was proud of his record shaping Coalition policy, including opposition to the Indigenous Voice and net-zero emissions targets. His departure follows party divisions and several high-profile defections that have fuelled concerns about the Nationals’ electoral prospects.
>>24367830 Matthew Canavan elected new Nationals leader after David Littleproud’s resignation - (Video) Queensland senator Matt Canavan has been elected leader of the Nationals following David Littleproud’s resignation, defeating NSW MP Kevin Hogan and Victorian senator Bridget McKenzie in a partyroom ballot. Canavan said his leadership would focus on rebuilding Australian industry, supporting coal-fired power and promoting what he called a “hyper-Australian” vision centred on national self-sufficiency. He argued coal remained the cheapest source of baseload energy and said proposals for new coal-fired power stations should be eligible for government underwriting. Canavan also suggested stronger trade measures could be needed to protect Australian manufacturing from subsidised Chinese imports. Victorian MP Darren Chester was elected deputy leader as the party prepares for what MPs described as a “mighty battle” with Labor, the teals and One Nation ahead of the next federal election.
>>24367838 Linda Reynolds ‘delighted’ as commonwealth ordered into mediation over Brittany Higgins settlement - Former Liberal senator Linda Reynolds has welcomed a court order requiring the Commonwealth to enter mediation over her lawsuit challenging the handling of Brittany Higgins’ $2.4 million settlement. Reynolds is suing the government and law firm HWL Ebsworth, alleging she was excluded from mediation discussions that led to the payout and that officials failed to properly defend allegations against her. Federal Court Justice Craig Colvin ordered the parties to undertake mediation before the case returns to court in June. Reynolds said the Commonwealth’s legal defence suggested it believed parliamentary regulations allowed it to settle claims without regard to her wishes or reputation. The dispute follows Reynolds’ defamation victories against Brittany Higgins and her husband David Sharaz over claims Reynolds mishandled the rape complaint.
>>24367856 Mining billionaire Clive Palmer re-enters politics with tilt at Queensland seat of Fadden - Mining billionaire Clive Palmer has announced a return to politics, declaring he will contest the Liberal-held Gold Coast seat of Fadden and revive the United Australia Party ahead of the next federal election. Palmer said he was motivated by what he described as a “national crisis” in Australian politics and insisted his campaign would focus on policy solutions rather than traditional left–right divisions. The 71-year-old had previously said he was too old for politics but told reporters improved health after losing weight had restored his energy. Palmer also pledged $10,000 to each member of the Iranian women’s football team who sought asylum in Australia following the Women’s Asian Cup controversy. His re-entry follows heavy spending on previous election campaigns that failed to secure lower-house representation.
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d0bc64 No.24599657
#45 - Part 32
Australian Politics and Society - Part 2
>>24379408 Australia to turn WWII site on ‘valuable’ Indonesian island into training base - Australia and Indonesia have agreed to redevelop a World War II-era site on Morotai island into a joint military training base, deepening defence ties as regional tensions rise. Defence Minister Richard Marles said the facility would support land and sea exercises and strengthen interoperability between the two nations, with Indonesia also set to embed a senior officer within Australia’s 1st Brigade in Darwin. The strategically located island sits near the Philippines and key maritime routes, and the base may be opened to partners including Singapore and the Philippines. The move follows a new bilateral security treaty and reflects efforts by both countries to enhance regional cooperation amid China’s rise and uncertainty around US leadership.
>>24395459 Australia and European Union poised to sign trade deal - Australia and the European Union are nearing a long-delayed free trade agreement, with negotiations said to be in the “final stretch” and European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen expected in Australia as soon as next week to help seal the accord. Talks that collapsed in 2023 over access for Australian beef, sheep meat, dairy and sugar have regained momentum amid escalating global trade tensions and United States tariff action. Trade Minister Don Farrell said he was “confident we can do a deal”, while outstanding disputes over red meat access may be resolved at leader level between Anthony Albanese and von der Leyen. The package is also expected to cover issues including mobility arrangements for skilled professionals and possible changes to Australia’s luxury car tax, which European manufacturers say prices their vehicles out of the Australian market in favour of cheaper Chinese electric vehicles.
>>24411237 Exercise Kakadu 2026: Sydney Harbour hosts 31 international warships for navy anniversary - (Video) Sydney Harbour has hosted the largest gathering of international warships in more than a decade as the Royal Australian Navy marked its 125th anniversary with an Exercise Kakadu fleet review involving 31 ships from 19 countries. The ceremonial display began with ships entering the harbour early on Saturday and was set to include a formal review led by Governor-General Sam Mostyn, Deputy Prime Minister Richard Marles, Defence Force chief Admiral David Johnston and Navy chief Vice Admiral Mark Hammond. Hammond said the event highlighted the depth of Australia’s regional partnerships and the importance of working together to maintain a secure maritime domain. The program also included an aerial display, a ceremonial gun salute and a historical flotilla procession later in the day.
>>24411247 Exercise Kakadu 2026 (KA26) - (Video) Exercise Kakadu is the Royal Australian Navy’s premier multinational maritime engagement exercise, conducted biennially to strengthen maritime security cooperation, enhance interoperability, and build partnerships across the Indo-Pacific. Exercise Kakadu 2026 (KA26), held 2-31 March, will involve more than 6,000 personnel from Australia and 18 partner nations, with activities conducted across northern and eastern Australia. Through multinational training, professional exchange and complex maritime scenarios, KA26 strengthens collective readiness and enhances the ability of maritime forces to operate together in demanding environments, supporting a region that is safe, secure and prosperous.
>>24411609 Labor’s Malinauskas secures second term in landslide despite significant One Nation surge - (Video) Peter Malinauskas has won a commanding second term in South Australia, with Labor on track to secure at least 32 of the 47 lower house seats despite a modest swing against the government’s primary vote. The result delivered one of Labor’s strongest mandates in the state’s history, while also exposing a fractured opposition as the Liberals collapsed and One Nation surged across regional and working-class areas, winning Hammond and strengthening its upper house presence. In his victory speech, Malinauskas urged a more generous and inclusive politics, saying diversity remained a source of strength and warning Labor not to mistake the result for “adulation”. Liberal leader Ashton Hurn conceded a “tough night”, while One Nation’s Cory Bernardi declared an “earthquake” had hit the major parties.
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d0bc64 No.24599658
#45 - Part 33
Australian Politics and Society - Part 3
>>24411636 Coalition plans assault on One Nation’s credibility to avoid South Australia-style wipeout - Opposition Leader Angus Taylor is preparing a campaign to undermine One Nation’s credibility after the party’s surge in South Australia exposed the risk of a broader conservative collapse. Coalition figures have agreed they must directly challenge Pauline Hanson rather than pursue any right-wing alliance, with plans to highlight the economic damage of her zero-immigration policy and question the idea that One Nation could credibly govern. The move comes after South Australia’s election, where One Nation outpolled the Liberals on the primary vote, and ahead of the Farrer byelection, where the Coalition is expected to sharpen its anti-migration message while distinguishing itself from Hanson. Senior Liberals also want to pair attacks on One Nation with a clearer economic agenda, arguing voters still do not know what the Coalition stands for.
>>24411657 Albanese urges 'vigilance' against those seeking to 'turn back the clock' on Australia - (Video) Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has urged Australians to be “vigilant” against politicians seeking to “turn back the clock” on multiculturalism after One Nation overtook the Liberals in South Australia on a strongly anti-migration platform. Speaking at an event recognising Vietnamese Australians, Albanese said modern Australia had been enriched by migrants who had become integral to the nation’s workforce and community life, and warned against nostalgia for a less inclusive era. His intervention came as Barnaby Joyce defended One Nation’s demand for assimilation and argued cultural division risked social conflict. The debate has intensified amid broader tensions over migration, social cohesion and the war in Gaza, with Labor presenting multiculturalism as a national strength while critics argue migration levels have outpaced infrastructure and services.
>>24415993 EU leader touches down as PM hopes to land trade deal - European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen has arrived in Australia for a three-day visit expected to culminate in the signing of a long-delayed free trade agreement, as Prime Minister Anthony Albanese pushes to secure expanded access for Australian exporters to the European market. Von der Leyen met Governor-General Sam Mostyn in Sydney after landing on Monday, while Trade Minister Don Farrell and his European counterpart Maros Sefcovic continued talks on unresolved issues. Agriculture remains the main sticking point, with Australia seeking greater access for meat exports and Europe still protective of its farmers, while disputes over geographic names such as feta, parmesan and prosecco are also expected to be settled through compromise. Albanese said a deal would deepen a relationship already worth about $109 billion in two-way trade.
>>24420499 EU chief warns Australia of China threat as $10bn trade deal signed - (Video) European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen has warned Australia against over-reliance on China, declaring it a strategic imperative to “get China right” as she and Prime Minister Anthony Albanese finalised a $10 billion trade deal and new security partnership. Addressing federal parliament, von der Leyen said both Europe and Australia faced a “dangerous moment” shaped by global conflicts and economic shocks, including rising fuel costs linked to the Iran war. She cautioned that dependence on single suppliers could be weaponised, noting Europe’s experience with Russian energy and trade deficits with China. The agreement includes closer co-operation on critical minerals and defence industry capabilities, with von der Leyen saying “our security is your security” as both sides seek to strengthen resilience and diversify supply chains.
>>24420502 EU leader urges democracies to band together in 'upside down' world - (Video) European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen has warned democracies must unite in a “brutal, harsh and unforgiving” world that has been “turned upside down”, as she addressed Australia’s federal parliament. She said global instability, including conflicts and shifting alliances, meant nations like Australia and those in Europe could no longer rely on distance or old certainties. “The comfort blanket of yesterday is ripped away,” she said, urging a more independent and resilient strategic posture. Von der Leyen highlighted growing co-operation among authoritarian states and said democracies must respond in kind, declaring “when we stand side-by-side we are stronger”. She stressed the need to “get China right”, reduce economic dependencies, and deepen defence, energy and critical minerals co-operation under the new Australia-EU partnership.
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d0bc64 No.24599659
#45 - Part 34
Australian Politics and Society - Part 4
>>24420508 Australian farmers slam ‘subpar’ EU trade deal for failing to deliver - (Video) Australian farmers have criticised the newly signed Australia-European Union free trade agreement as “extremely disappointing”, arguing it fails to deliver meaningful gains for agriculture despite years of negotiations. National Farmers’ Federation president Hamish McIntyre said the $10 billion deal lacked “commercially meaningful access” for key exports such as beef, dairy and sugar, warning producers would “pay the price… for decades to come”. Industry groups said modest quota increases still fell short of previous market access levels, while the EU continued to protect its own farmers through subsidies. Critics also warned the deal could undermine local industries, including forestry, due to increased competition from imports. Prime Minister Anthony Albanese defended the agreement as a “very good deal”, highlighting expanded export quotas and broader economic benefits for Australian producers and consumers.
>>24443520 Dezi Freeman killed by police in Victoria's north-east after seven-month hunt - (Video) A man believed to be fugitive gunman Dezi Freeman has been shot dead by police following a three-hour stand-off in Victoria’s north-east, ending a months-long manhunt. Police surrounded a remote property near the Murray River early Monday before Freeman emerged and allegedly pointed a firearm, after which he was fatally shot. Victoria Police Chief Commissioner Mike Bush said officers gave “every opportunity” for a peaceful resolution and acted appropriately. Freeman had been on the run since the fatal shooting of two police officers in August, prompting one of the state’s largest search operations involving thousands of leads and extensive regional searches. Authorities said the outcome brings “closure” to a “tragic and terrible event”, though formal identification is still underway and investigations into the shooting will continue, including oversight by professional standards. Police said no officers were injured, the suspect was believed to be alone, and the investigation had examined more than 2,000 leads across difficult terrain over the past months.
>>24443533 Firearm found near Dezi Freeman’s shipping-container hideout - A firearm has been recovered near the site where police fatally shot suspected double cop killer Dezi Freeman, with images showing a discarded pistol beside his remote hideout in Victoria’s north-east. Police confirmed video captured Freeman emerging from a shipping-container structure and pointing a weapon at officers, prompting the fatal shooting after a prolonged stand-off. Victoria Police Chief Commissioner Mike Bush said the action removed any chance of a peaceful resolution, with officers given “every opportunity” to surrender. Investigators are examining whether the weapon belonged to one of the officers killed in August. Authorities believe Freeman was alone at the property, while the state coroner will oversee an independent investigation into the shooting as part of standard procedure.
>>24443543 How Dezi evaded cops and secretly moved 200km during seven-month manhunt, as police reveal “strong theory” - (Video) Police believe fugitive gunman Dezi Freeman likely received assistance to travel nearly 200 kilometres during a seven-month manhunt, as investigators examine how he evaded capture after allegedly killing two officers. Victoria Police Chief Commissioner Mike Bush said it would have been “very difficult” for Freeman to reach the remote property alone, with inquiries continuing into whether others harboured or supported him. Freeman was located in a container-style structure near Walwa before a fatal stand-off with police. Authorities had previously considered he may be dead, citing no confirmed sightings, but maintained multiple possibilities including survival in remote bushland. Experts said his ability to evade detection reflected “rat-like cunning”, while police continue investigating movements, support networks and the circumstances of his final location.
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d0bc64 No.24599660
#45 - Part 35
Australian Politics and Society - Part 5
>>24429017 Broken Bay bishop Anthony Randazzo plucked by Pope Leo to become the Vatican’s top Aussie - Broken Bay Bishop Anthony Randazzo has been appointed by Pope Leo as Prefect of the Dicastery for Legislative Texts, elevating him to Archbishop and making him the most senior Australian resident in the Vatican. The surprise appointment places him at the centre of interpreting and applying canon law across the global Catholic Church. Randazzo, who studied canon law in Rome and previously served in the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, will relocate within three months after a personal meeting with the Pope. He said he was “profoundly grateful” for the trust placed in him. The move signals a focus on rigorous legal interpretation within the Church and marks the highest-ranking Australian Vatican posting since Cardinal George Pell.
>>24447120 Five social media platforms investigated over compliance with under-16 ban - Five major social media platforms are under investigation for potential breaches of Australia’s under-16 ban, with authorities shifting toward enforcement after identifying compliance failures. Facebook, Instagram, Snapchat, TikTok and YouTube were flagged for “potential noncompliance”, including allowing repeated attempts to bypass age checks and failing to prevent banned users from creating new accounts. Communications Minister Anika Wells said “big tech needs to do better”, warning companies face significant penalties if they fail to meet legal obligations. eSafety Commissioner Julie Inman Grant said enforcement action would depend on evidence of systemic failures. A survey found many underage users remain active despite the ban, raising concerns about the effectiveness of safeguards as regulators prepare potential legal action.
>>24447126 Police vow to track down the people who helped Dezi Freeman - Police have pledged to pursue anyone who assisted fugitive gunman Dezi Freeman during his seven months on the run, following his fatal shooting in Victoria’s north-east. Chief Commissioner Mike Bush said it would have been “very difficult” for Freeman to travel nearly 200 kilometres without help, confirming investigators will examine who may have harboured or supported him. Authorities will question all individuals connected to the rural property where Freeman was found, seeking to determine how long he had been there and who provided assistance. Police warned anyone found complicit could face serious criminal charges, with potential penalties of up to 20 years’ imprisonment. The investigation continues alongside efforts to establish the full circumstances of Freeman’s movements and support network.
>>24447136 Eight snipers and a fatal choice: The high-stakes tactic that cornered Dezi Freeman - Police deployed specialist tactical units including at least eight snipers to end a three-hour stand-off with fugitive gunman Dezi Freeman at a remote property in Victoria’s north-east. Officers from the Special Operations Group surrounded the container-style hideout, using armoured vehicles and planning for multiple contingencies before attempting to negotiate a peaceful surrender. Police used non-lethal distraction devices to force Freeman from the structure after he refused repeated calls to surrender. Authorities said Freeman emerged armed and fired towards police, prompting snipers to open fire and fatally shoot him. The operation followed a seven-month manhunt after Freeman allegedly killed two police officers, with investigators now examining how he evaded capture and whether others assisted him.
>>24451108 US slams Australia’s streaming quotas, PBS in new list of trade grievances - The United States has escalated trade concerns with Australia, criticising local content rules for streaming services and the Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme in its latest annual trade report. The Trump administration said Australia’s requirement for streaming platforms to invest in local content could “distort” investment decisions, while raising objections to drug pricing policies that it claims undervalue American innovation. The report also highlighted declining US trade surpluses with Australia and flagged ongoing scrutiny of policies affecting technology and media companies. The Albanese government has acknowledged the concerns but indicated it will defend key policies, including the PBS, while continuing trade discussions with Washington. The formal inclusion of these issues signals continued pressure from the US in bilateral negotiations.
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d0bc64 No.24599661
#45 - Part 36
Australian Politics and Society - Part 6
>>24451132 Secret IBAC probe into Dan Andrews and UFU nears release - Victoria’s anti-corruption watchdog is preparing to release findings from its long-running Operation Richmond investigation into dealings between former premier Dan Andrews and the United Firefighters Union. IBAC Commissioner Victoria Elliott said the report would be tabled by June 30, following a probe launched in 2019 into 2016 enterprise bargaining negotiations with the union. The investigation has examined allegations of corrupt conduct and the role of senior figures in securing a favourable agreement. Elliott acknowledged the inquiry had taken “too long” due to complex factors including court matters and the pandemic, with the report now in its natural justice phase. The release is expected to draw political attention ahead of the state election, as IBAC continues calls for expanded investigative powers.
>>24451143 Dezi Freeman’s final days and the clues that could lead police to his helpers - Police believe fugitive gunman Dezi Freeman relied on external support in his final days, as investigators examine evidence from his remote hideout in Victoria’s north-east following his death. Authorities found a makeshift camp with shipping containers, supplies and modifications suggesting multiple people may have assisted him. Freeman is believed to have moved to the site only weeks before being located, after months evading capture by living off the grid. Police used surveillance and tactical planning to confirm he was alone before initiating the final operation. Items recovered at the scene, including phones and equipment, are being analysed to identify potential accomplices. Investigators are focusing on how Freeman travelled, who supported him, and how he sustained himself during the seven-month manhunt.
>>24459142 Liam Alexander Hall may enter insanity plea over alleged terrorism act at Perth Invasion Day rally - A man accused of throwing a homemade explosive into a crowd at a Perth Invasion Day rally may argue he was not criminally responsible due to insanity, his lawyer has told a court. Liam Alexander Hall, 32, allegedly tossed a device filled with ball bearings and screws into a gathering of about 2,500 people in Forrest Place, in what was described as a “potential mass casualty event”, though it failed to detonate. His lawyer said a psychiatric report would be obtained ahead of a possible Section 27 defence, which applies where a mental condition prevents understanding of wrongdoing. Hall is the first person charged with a terrorist act in Western Australia and remains in custody, facing multiple serious offences linked to the incident.
>>24459199 Jayson Joseph Michaels: Alleged Perth terror plotter denied bail over ‘chilling’ mass casualty diary - (Video) A Western Australian court has denied bail to Jayson Joseph Michaels, accused of planning a “mass casualty” terrorist attack targeting a Perth mosque and other sites, citing the seriousness of the allegations and detailed material found in his possession. Magistrate Belinda Coleman said Michaels had not shown the “exceptional circumstances” required for release, describing a 19-page diary outlining a “day of justice” as “chilling” and indicative of intent. Prosecutors argued the writings detailed target selection, weapons research, logistics and escape planning, including disguising a vehicle as an ambulance, while also referencing other attacks. Defence counsel argued the material reflected “bigoted daydreams” and the “fantasy life” of a depressed and isolated young man, rather than a genuine plan. Michaels faces multiple terrorism-related and weapons charges.
>>24459234 Donald Trump slaps 100% tariff on pharmaceuticals, hitting Australian industry hard - (Video) The United States has imposed a 100 per cent tariff on imported pharmaceuticals, a move expected to disrupt Australian exports and strain trade relations despite assurances domestic medicine prices will remain unchanged. US President Donald Trump introduced the levy under national security powers, targeting patented medicines and linking it to broader efforts to pressure global drug pricing. Australia exported more than $US1.3 billion in pharmaceuticals to the US in 2025, with companies now facing uncertainty. Health Minister Mark Butler said the policy was “deeply disappointing” and “not the act of a friend”, but stressed the Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme would shield Australian consumers from price increases. Industry groups warned the tariffs could impact exporters, while some firms with US manufacturing operations may secure exemptions or reduced levies under the new regime.
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d0bc64 No.24599662
#45 - Part 37
Australian Politics and Society - Part 7
>>24459261 Butler ‘confident’ of CSL exemption as Australian drugs incur 100pc tariff - (Video) Australia’s pharmaceutical sector is facing disruption after the United States imposed a 100 per cent tariff on branded medicines, though the federal government says major exporter CSL is likely to secure an exemption. Health Minister Mark Butler said he was “confident” CSL would be largely shielded due to its US manufacturing footprint and the exemption of plasma-based therapies, while reiterating the Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme would not be altered. The tariffs, introduced under US national security powers, apply at the highest rate to Australia despite lower deals struck with other countries. Industry groups warned of uncertainty for exporters and renewed calls for PBS reform, citing delays to new medicines. Butler described the move as “not the act of a friend” and said the government was pressing for the decision to be reversed.
>>24463097 Dezi Freeman associates arrested then released without charge - (Video) Two associates of Dezi Freeman have been arrested and released without charge as police continue investigating how the gunman evaded capture during a months-long manhunt. The man and woman were detained at separate properties in north-east Victoria before being freed pending further inquiries, with police confirming they were not family members. Authorities are seeking to identify who may have assisted Freeman while he was on the run for 216 days after killing two officers serving a warrant. Victoria Police Chief Commissioner Mike Bush said it was “very important” to determine who was “complicit in getting him here” and supporting him. Investigators are examining evidence including burner phones recovered from Freeman’s remote hideout, as potential charges for assisting an offender could carry significant prison terms.
>>24463109 Japan PM Takaichi plans Australia visit to discuss rare earths - Japan’s Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi is planning an official visit to Australia later this month to strengthen cooperation on critical minerals supply chains and regional security, including safe navigation in the Strait of Hormuz. The trip, marking the first by a Japanese leader since 2022, coincides with the 50th anniversary of bilateral ties and reflects efforts to reduce reliance on China for rare earths. Australia’s capacity to supply key minerals is expected to be central to discussions, alongside defence cooperation such as joint training and naval capability, including Canberra’s planned adoption of Mogami-class frigates. Leaders are also set to advance the “free and open Indo-Pacific” framework, with broader regional diplomacy potentially extending to Southeast Asia as Japan deepens strategic partnerships.
>>24466566 Australia given fuel supply assurances as plans in works for visit by Japan's prime minister - Australia has secured assurances from Japan that fuel supplies will continue uninterrupted, as the government moves to shore up energy security amid disruption linked to the Strait of Hormuz crisis. Assistant Trade and Foreign Affairs Minister Matt Thistlethwaite said Japan had confirmed “normal supply will continue” following recent talks, alongside similar commitments from South Korea and Singapore. The development comes as Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi considers a visit to Australia to discuss fuel security, rare earths and regional conditions, though Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has not confirmed the trip. Australia remains heavily reliant on imported fuel, with reserves covering only limited weeks of demand — about 39 days of petrol, 29 days of diesel and 30 days of jet fuel — underscoring vulnerability as more than 50 shipments remain en route and diversification efforts continue.
>>24490964 Police hunt for Dezi Freeman’s network using fingerprints from killer’s hideout - (Video) Detectives investigating the death of alleged police killer Dezi Freeman are pursuing possible collaborators, using fingerprinting and DNA testing to identify individuals connected to his hideout near the Victorian-NSW border. Police have contacted associates and people linked to the site, seeking forensic samples to both identify suspects and exclude innocent parties, with evidence collected from the container where Freeman had been staying. Investigators are examining items including swimming gear, paddles and other equipment as they explore how Freeman may have moved through the area after the fatal shooting of two officers. Authorities have also been analysing the crime scene for signs of external assistance, while continuing surveillance and intelligence operations focused on Freeman’s network. The investigation remains ongoing as police work to determine whether others were involved in supporting him.
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d0bc64 No.24599663
#45 - Part 38
Australian Politics and Society - Part 8
>>24494419 Anthony Albanese appoints Chief of Navy, Vice Admiral Mark Hammond, as new defence chief - (Video) Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has appointed Vice Admiral Mark Hammond as Chief of the Defence Force, alongside naming Lieutenant General Susan Coyle as the new Chief of Army, marking the first time a woman has led the service. Rear Admiral Matthew Buckley will become Chief of Navy, as part of a broader leadership reshuffle ahead of the release of a new defence strategy. The appointments come amid heightened regional tensions and ongoing global instability, with Hammond confirming the navy is capable of deploying assets to support international operations if requested. Albanese said the changes would strengthen Australia’s defence capability and leadership, while Defence Minister Richard Marles praised outgoing leaders for overseeing major reforms and strategic initiatives, including AUKUS and expanded international defence cooperation.
>>24494424 First woman to lead the army, navy chief now new head of defence force - (Video) Vice Admiral Mark Hammond will become Chief of the Defence Force in July following a senior leadership reshuffle, while Lieutenant General Susan Coyle has been appointed as Australia’s first female army chief. Hammond said the navy was “absolutely” capable of deploying a warship to the Strait of Hormuz if requested, highlighting current operational readiness, though no request has been made. Coyle’s appointment was described as a historic milestone, reflecting her extensive experience across operational and strategic roles. Defence Minister Richard Marles said the changes marked an important moment for the Australian Defence Force, while analysts noted Hammond’s close involvement in the AUKUS submarine program. Critics, however, warned the appointment could reinforce a continued focus on naval capability at the expense of broader reform priorities within defence planning.
>>24494445 OPINION: I served with the new army chief. I can confirm she has the right stuff - "With wars in Europe and the Middle East, and Chinese naval task groups operating closer to Australia, the familiar line that this is our most challenging strategic environment since World War II is starting to feel dated. We are certainly in a more dangerous period. That is the backdrop to today’s leadership announcements: Vice Admiral Mark Hammond as the next Chief of the Defence Force, Rear Admiral Matt Buckley as Chief of Navy, and Lieutenant General Susan Coyle as Chief of Army will lead the ADF through this. Coyle’s appointment stands out. Not just because she is the first woman to lead a service, but because she is the first Chief of Joint Capabilities to step into the role, bringing experience in cyber, space and the enabling elements of how the ADF fights. Coyle’s appointment is not about gender. But it is significant that she is the first woman to lead one of Australia’s armed services. It reflects not only her leadership, but the contribution of those who came before her … Lieutenant General Coyle’s experience as commander of information warfare and chief of joint capabilities also points to where the army is heading. As the first service chief to come from joint capabilities command, she brings a clear focus on integration, not just across the joint force, but with emerging technologies, particularly space and cyber. Today is a significant moment. Three officers have been appointed at a time when the world is becoming more dangerous, to lead the ADF and prepare Australia for what lies ahead. That task will not be easy, and they deserve our support." - Jennifer Parker, adjunct professor with the University of Western Australia Defence and Security Institute and non-resident fellow at the Lowy Institute. She served for more than 20 years as a warfare officer in the Royal Australian Navy - The Age
>>24498482 ALP learns war lessons: extra billions for drones - The Albanese government will boost defence spending on drones and counter-drone systems by an additional $2bn-$5bn as part of a new 10-year weapons investment plan shaped by lessons from conflicts in Ukraine and the Middle East. The strategy will increase total drone funding to between $12bn and $15bn, covering aerial, maritime and land-based unmanned systems, alongside investments in missile defence, guided weapons and domestic manufacturing. Defence Minister Richard Marles said recent conflicts had shown the importance of drones in delivering “significant asymmetric advantage” against more expensive platforms. The plan comes amid concerns the Australian Defence Force lacks sufficient capability for modern warfare, particularly in low-cost drone and missile systems. Critics have warned delays in delivering new capabilities risk leaving Australia exposed in the near term despite long-term investment commitments.
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d0bc64 No.24599664
#45 - Part 39
Australian Politics and Society - Part 9
>>24498525 Angus Taylor targets non-violent migrants who quietly hate our freedoms - (Video) Opposition Leader Angus Taylor will unveil a tougher immigration policy targeting migrants who reject “Australian values”, proposing stricter visa rules, deportations and expanded screening powers. The plan includes prioritising housing and social security access for citizens, restoring temporary protection visas, and increasing scrutiny of visa applicants’ backgrounds, including social media checks. Taylor argues some migrants from non-liberal societies may be less likely to integrate, raising concerns about parallel legal systems and rejection of democratic principles. The policy also targets visa overstayers and proposes stronger enforcement across security agencies. The Coalition says the measures are needed to restore integrity to the migration system and reduce pressure on housing and infrastructure, while critics are expected to challenge the assumptions underpinning the approach.
>>24498549 Roblox reveals sweeping changes amid Australian crackdown - (Video) Gaming platform Roblox will introduce new age-based account systems and facial age-estimation technology to restrict children’s access to inappropriate content following regulatory pressure in Australia. The changes include “Roblox Kids” and “Roblox Select” tiers, limiting younger users to curated games and restricting chat functions, while older users gain broader access based on estimated age. The overhaul follows scrutiny from eSafety Commissioner Julie Inman Grant over concerns about grooming and harmful content, with potential penalties flagged for non-compliance. Roblox said the measures are part of a long-term safety strategy, though regulators are continuing their investigation. The company will also introduce formal age classifications and stricter developer requirements, as authorities assess whether the new safeguards adequately protect young users on the platform.
>>24505940 Australia-Papua New Guinea Pukpuk treaty faces challenges, PNG soldiers confined to barracks amid unrest - Papua New Guinea has confined military personnel to barracks for a month after unrest linked to nepotism and fraud allegations forced Defence Minister Billy Joseph to step aside, as Australia prepares to ratify the Pukpuk treaty. PNG Defence Force chief Philip Polewara ordered bases closed and access to weapons restricted after soldiers set up roadblocks in Port Moresby and others in Lae defied orders demanding Joseph’s arrest. Prime Minister James Marape, now overseeing defence, warned misconduct would not be tolerated, stressing “discipline is the foundation” of the force. The crisis follows claims of recruitment “irregularities” involving fake documents, which Joseph denies. Australia will support an inquiry and deepen defence ties under the treaty, though analysts warn standards have declined, while supporters argue the partnership is vital as PNG faces internal instability.
>>24512128 Angus Taylor hits back after Paul Keating accuses him of embracing ‘racism’ over migration policy - Opposition Leader Angus Taylor has rejected claims by former prime minister Paul Keating that his immigration policy reflects “racism”, saying the criticism shows Keating is “out of touch with Australians”. Keating accused Taylor of echoing the “dumb bigotry” of One Nation and abandoning the Liberal Party’s “best instincts”, while also criticising former prime minister John Howard’s past migration stance. Taylor responded that prioritising “Australian values” was not racist, arguing “immigration numbers are too high” and standards “too low”. The Coalition policy includes deporting migrants who fail to meet national values, tracking 65,000 expired visa holders and expanding social media screening. Keating warned the approach was “at primary odds with an immigrant nation” and likened it to “Trump ICE-style policies”, as political tensions escalate over migration settings.
>>24512238 Australia banks on Ghost Bat and Ghost Shark in drone warfare shift - (Video) Australia will invest $12–15 billion in drone and counter-drone technologies over the next decade, as Defence Minister Richard Marles says modern conflicts show autonomous systems are “central to how war happens”. The strategy centres on the MQ-28A Ghost Bat, an Australian-built uncrewed aircraft designed to operate alongside fighter jets, and the Ghost Shark, an extra-large autonomous underwater vehicle capable of surveillance and strike operations. Officials say the systems provide a “force multiplier” and extend reach without risking personnel, though experts note the Ghost Bat remains relatively costly compared to cheaper drones used in Ukraine and the Middle East. Analysts welcomed the shift but cautioned that greater investment in smaller, mass-produced drones may be needed.
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d0bc64 No.24599665
#45 - Part 40
Australian Politics and Society - Part 10
>>24515545 Australia and Japan seal $10 billion warship deal with 3 Mogami frigates ordered first - (Video) Australia and Japan have signed a $10 billion deal for a new fleet of Mogami-class frigates, with the first three to be built in Japan and delivered within three years as part of a major naval upgrade. Mitsubishi Heavy Industries will construct the initial vessels, while a further eight are planned to be built in Western Australia. Defence Minister Richard Marles said the acquisition would deliver a “larger and more lethal surface combat fleet” at the fastest pace ever for the Royal Australian Navy, with the first ship due in 2029. The vessels will replace ageing ANZAC-class frigates and feature advanced missile systems and reduced crew requirements. Japanese Defence Minister Shinjiro Koizumi said the agreement marked a “major step” in defence cooperation, strengthening ties as both nations deepen strategic alignment.
>>24523341 Fiji drug kingpin Jone Vakarisi ‘beaten to death’ on Aussie-linked military base - A death in custody at Fiji’s main military barracks has become a murder investigation after alleged drug kingpin Jone Vakarisi was found to have suffered fatal blunt force injuries, contradicting initial claims of a “medical emergency”. Authorities said the 36-year-old died during questioning at Queen Elizabeth Barracks in Suva, where Australian Defence Force personnel are also stationed, though none are believed to have been involved. The incident has raised concerns about the conduct of the Republic of Fiji Military Forces, with family members alleging Vakarisi was taken from his home and beaten. The case comes amid deepening defence ties between Australia and Fiji and growing scrutiny over drug trafficking networks in the Pacific, as calls mount for an independent investigation into the circumstances of his death.
>>24523351 Australia pledges up to $7bn for counter-drone defences - The federal government will invest up to $7 billion over the next decade in counter-drone capabilities, as it seeks to address a key weakness in the Australian Defence Force exposed by modern conflicts. Defence Industry Minister Pat Conroy said drones and counter-drones had become the “modern face of warfare”, prompting a shift in spending priorities after lessons from Ukraine and the Middle East. The plan effectively doubles previous funding, with an initial $30 million allocated to Australian firms to develop interceptor drones and laser systems. Officials say the aim is to counter low-cost drones more efficiently, reducing reliance on expensive missile systems. Analysts welcomed the move but said Australia had been slow to respond and questioned transparency around funding, warning the balance between drone and counter-drone investment may still be inadequate.
>>24526195 Gaming giants Roblox and Fortnite put on notice over extremist fears - (Video) Major gaming platforms including Roblox, Minecraft, Fortnite and Steam have been issued legally enforceable notices by Australia’s eSafety Commissioner over concerns they are being used to groom children and spread extremist content. Julie Inman Grant warned “predatory adults” were targeting platforms with a “critical mass” of young users, citing evidence of grooming, cyberbullying and games glorifying terrorism, Nazi imagery and mass violence. Companies must now explain how they are mitigating risks such as child sexual exploitation, radicalisation and online abuse, with penalties for non-compliance. Authorities said millions of children use these platforms, making them attractive targets for offenders, while also raising concerns about linked messaging services used to contact minors. The move aims to force stronger safeguards and transparency across the gaming sector.
>>24526238 Fiji military in about-face as gangster’s death at Aussie-linked base becomes murder probe - Fiji’s military has reversed its initial account of drug figure Jone Vakarisi’s death, as police launch a murder investigation into allegations he was beaten while in custody at a Suva barracks shared with Australian personnel. Republic of Fiji Military Forces commander Ro Jone Kalouniwai had described the death as a “medical emergency”, but a post-mortem found severe blunt force injuries to the head and chest, prompting authorities to reclassify the case. The incident has sparked a political and security scandal, raising concerns in Canberra given close defence ties, though no Australian personnel are believed to be involved. Family members dispute claims Vakarisi attended voluntarily, alleging he was forcibly taken, as officials pledge a “thorough” investigation into the circumstances surrounding his death.
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d0bc64 No.24599666
#45 - Part 41
Australian Politics and Society - Part 11
>>24533754 From Gallipoli to today: How Australia and New Zealand remember Anzac Day in 2026 - (Video) Australians and New Zealanders will gather at dawn on April 25 to mark Anzac Day, continuing a century-old tradition of remembrance while reflecting evolving perspectives on service and national history. Commemorations will include Dawn Services, marches, gunfire breakfasts and community rituals, alongside growing recognition of previously under-represented groups, including Indigenous service members and female veterans. The day also reflects the shared history of the two nations, forged during the Gallipoli campaign and reinforced through subsequent conflicts. Attention this year includes Victoria Cross recipient Ben Roberts-Smith, who is expected to attend while on bail, describing Anzac Day as “sacred”. Veterans such as Shirley Harris, now 100, reflect on service and loss, saying the day remains focused on those who “didn’t come back” and the enduring meaning of sacrifice.
>>24533785 French town where war dead are not forgotten - The northern French town of Villers-Bretonneux continues to honour thousands of Australian soldiers killed in the First World War, with annual Anzac Day ceremonies reinforcing a lasting connection between the two nations. The Australian National Memorial commemorates more than 10,000 Australians with no known grave, while meticulously maintained cemeteries reflect the scale of loss among a generation that “never came back”. Each year, visitors gather at dawn as names are read and wreaths laid, before the site returns to quiet stillness. Local residents help preserve the memory, with the town embracing the fallen as its own and affirming “N’oublions jamais l’Australie” - “let us never forget Australia”. The commemorations highlight both the enduring bond and the human cost of war across generations.
>>24533803 ADF | Chief of the Defence Force ANZAC Day Address 2026 - (Video) "On Anzac Day, we mark the landings at Gallipoli of Australian and New Zealand Army Corps (ANZAC) soldiers in 1915 and commemorate all Australian personnel who served and died in wars, conflicts and peacekeeping operations. We reflect on their courage, discipline and self-sacrifice. The Anzac spirit lives on in the hearts and minds of all Australians as we acknowledge the courage and sacrifice of those who contributed so much to shaping the identity of our nation. Australian Defence Force (ADF) personnel across Australia and serving around the world will commemorate Anzac Day through dawn services and commemorative services. In Australia, ADF personnel will support the Australian War Memorial services as well as services in each capital city and in dozens of smaller cities and towns. Overseas, ADF personnel will also support services at Gallipoli in Türkiye, Villers-Bretonneux in France, as well as services across the Indo-Pacific." - Defence Australia
>>24533816 ADF | Anzac Day message from deployed personnel - (Video) Anzac Day is a time to remember, reflect, and honour those who have served, past and present. From Gallipoli to today's operations overseas, the Anzac spirit endures. Lest we forget. - Defence Australia
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d0bc64 No.24599667
#45 - Part 42
Australian Politics and Society - Part 12
>>24533827 Anzac Day 2026 LIVE: National Dawn Service - Official Broadcast - Join us as we go LIVE from around Australia for Anzac Day 2026, including the National Commemorative Service in Canberra. This stream will include the following services: Sydney Dawn Service (4:19am to 5:30am AEST), Canberra Dawn Service (5:30am to 6am AEST), Melbourne Dawn Service (6am to 6:30am AEST), Adelaide Dawn Service (6:30am to 7:30am AEST). - ABC Australia
>>24533833 Anzac Day 2026 LIVE: Gallipoli & Villers-Bretonneux Services - Official Broadcast - Join us as we go LIVE from the Gallipoli and Villers-Bretonneux dawn services on Anzac Day 2026. - ABC Australia
>>24533845 ANZAC Day 2026 Melbourne Dawn Service - Watch the 2026 Melbourne Dawn Service at the Shrine of Remembrance. The Service will commence at 5.30am. In solemn tradition, we gather to commemorate those who served and died in defence of Australia. The service is held at dawn to coincide with the time of the Gallipoli landing in 1915 - the first major military action by Australian and New Zealand forces (ANZACs) during the First World War. The event includes recitations, hymns, wreath-laying and an address by the Governor of Victoria. - ShrineMelbourne
>>24533854 Anzac Day 2026 March & Commemoration Service - Watch the live stream of the Anzac Day March and Commemoration Service. Honour and recognise those who have served and who currently serve in defence of Australia and its interests. The march commences in Swanston Street (near Federation Square) along St Kilda Road to the Shrine of Remembrance. The march is normally complete by midday, and is followed by a commemoration service at the Shrine of Remembrance. - ShrineMelbourne
>>24533861 Video: The Last Post - Anzac Day 2026 - "They shall grow not old, as we that are left grow old; Age shall not weary them, nor the years condemn. At the going down of the sun and in the morning We will remember them." Lest We Forget.
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d0bc64 No.24599668
#45 - Part 43
Australian Politics and Society - Part 13
>>24536189 Two women charged with allegedly vandalising RSL on Anzac Day - (Video) Two women have been charged after allegedly defacing a Melbourne RSL ahead of Anzac Day dawn services, as police investigate a series of vandalism incidents targeting war memorials and veterans’ venues across the city. Police allege the pair spray-painted the Heidelberg RSL before being arrested nearby, while other sites including Reservoir, Fawkner and Port Melbourne were also targeted with anti-military graffiti and red paint. Messages included “kill the troops”, “death to ADF” and “death to Australia”. Veterans’ groups and political leaders condemned the incidents as “disgraceful” and “cowardly”, while ceremonies proceeded with strong attendance despite the damage. Investigations are continuing into multiple incidents, including vandalism of memorials in Port Melbourne and Moonee Ponds in the lead-up to Anzac Day.
>>24536218 Marco Rubio pays tribute to Anzac Day in a message of unity - (Video) US Secretary of State Marco Rubio has paid tribute to the Anzacs in a message of unity. The US Secretary of State called the valour demonstrated in Gallipoli an “inspiration for generations”. Mr Rubio also expressed gratitude for all who have served. - Sky News Australia
>>24536218 PRESS STATEMENT: Anzac Day - "On behalf of the United States of America, I am honored to join the people of Australia and New Zealand in commemorating Anzac Day on April 25. As we mark the 111th anniversary of the Gallipoli landings, we pay tribute to the Anzac forces who answered the call of duty. The valor demonstrated at Gallipoli has been an inspiration for generations and exemplifies the courage and selflessness of those who served and continue to serve. As we reflect on this solemn day, we honor the memory of the fallen, express gratitude for all who have served, and reaffirm our shared commitment to the values and partnerships that unite us." - MARCO RUBIO, U.S. SECRETARY OF STATE - APRIL 24, 2026
>>24536239 Prime Minister joins thousands gathered at Australian War Memorial to commemorate Anzac Day - (Video) Tens of thousands gathered before dawn at the Australian War Memorial in Canberra to mark the 111th anniversary of the Gallipoli landings, with Prime Minister Anthony Albanese among those attending the national Anzac Day service. The ceremony featured a didgeridoo performance by Wiradjuri man and Flight Lieutenant James Evans before wreaths were laid by Australian and New Zealand representatives. Royal Australian Air Force Flying Officer Kbora Ali delivered the commemorative address, reflecting on her family’s escape from Afghanistan and her later decision to join the military. She linked the sacrifices of modern service personnel to the “legacy and sacrifices” of the Anzacs. The day’s commemorations also included an Indigenous service, smoking ceremony and veterans’ march through Canberra.
>>24536485 Boos mar Melbourne’s Anzac Day dawn service - (Video) Booing during a Welcome to Country and anti-Anzac graffiti at several Melbourne RSLs disrupted Anzac Day commemorations in Victoria, prompting condemnation from political leaders, veterans’ groups and attendees. About 55,000 people gathered at Melbourne’s Shrine of Remembrance, where Bunurong elder Mark Brown’s Welcome to Country was repeatedly jeered by a small group linked to former members and associates of the disbanded neo-Nazi National Socialist Network. Many in the crowd applauded in response to drown out the disruption. Overnight vandalism targeting RSLs in Reservoir, Heidelberg and Fawkner included slogans such as “kill the troops” and “f*ck Anzacs”, with two women charged over alleged graffiti offences. Despite the incidents, ceremonies proceeded with large crowds and messages of remembrance, unity and respect for veterans and their families.
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d0bc64 No.24599669
#45 - Part 44
Australian Politics and Society - Part 14
>>24536548 Booing during Welcome to Country at Melbourne, Sydney and Perth Anzac Day services draws condemnation - (Video) Booing and heckling during Welcome to Country ceremonies at Anzac Day services in Melbourne, Sydney and Perth have drawn widespread condemnation from political leaders, veterans and attendees. Disruptions occurred during addresses by Indigenous elders at dawn services, with some crowd members jeering while others applauded to drown out the noise. Defence Minister Richard Marles described the behaviour as “deeply disgraceful”, while Victorian Premier Jacinta Allan called it “bastardry”. RSL leaders said the incidents disrespected veterans and overshadowed a day intended for remembrance and reflection. Police investigated disturbances at several events, including one arrest in Sydney and move-on notices issued in Perth. Attendees said the crowd response in support of speakers reflected the broader spirit of respect and unity that characterised the commemorations.
>>24536578 Standing and applauding:Incredible scenes at Collingwood and Essendon clash after Anzac Dawn Services around Australia marred- (Video) Tens of thousands of AFL fans at the Melbourne Cricket Ground applauded and cheered throughout a Welcome to Country before the Anzac Day clash between Collingwood and Essendon, contrasting with booing that disrupted dawn services in several Australian cities earlier in the day. Wurundjeri elder Uncle Colin Hunter Jr received a standing ovation from the crowd of almost 100,000 before delivering his address and paying tribute to Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people and military personnel who served Australia. Supporters online described the moment as “moving” and praised the atmosphere of “mutual respect”. The response followed disruptions during Welcome to Country ceremonies at Anzac Day services in Melbourne, Sydney and Perth, where Indigenous speakers were heckled by sections of the crowd during commemorations.
>>24536645 ‘War never solves anything’: Veterans honoured across Australia on Anzac Day - Thousands gathered across Australia for Anzac Day commemorations marking the 111th anniversary of the Gallipoli landings, with veterans, political leaders and families attending dawn services, marches and memorial events. Second World War veteran Roy Pearson, 99, reflected that “war never solves anything”, while other veterans spoke of remembrance, sacrifice and military service. Ceremonies in Sydney, Melbourne and Perth were disrupted by booing during Indigenous acknowledgments and Welcome to Country addresses, drawing condemnation from political leaders and veterans’ organisations. In Sydney, a 24-year-old man was arrested over an alleged disturbance at the Martin Place service. Despite the disruptions, large crowds attended commemorations nationwide, with attendees describing the ceremonies as “moving” and focused on honouring Australians who served and those who never returned from war.
>>24536678 How a tin of bully beef sparked a truce between enemies at Gallipoli - A brief truce between Australian and Turkish soldiers at Gallipoli was sparked by a tin of bully beef thrown across enemy lines, according to the family of Major Leslie George Fussell. Stationed at Quinn’s Post in 1915 amid constant bomb attacks, Major Fussell reportedly tossed the food tin towards Turkish trenches before receiving tobacco and a note in return reading: “Thank you for the meat.” Shortly afterwards, a Turkish soldier reportedly called out “we are not your enemy”, allowing Australian troops to recover the bodies of dead comrades from the parapet before fighting resumed. Major Fussell later served on the Western Front and received the Military Cross for bravery at Pozieres. His son Douglas said the story remained deeply significant to his family and reflected the enduring meaning of Anzac Day.
>>24540678 Trump shooting: Suspect ‘armed with guns and knives’ charged after shots fired at presidential dinner - (Video) US President Donald Trump was rushed from the White House Correspondents’ Dinner in Washington after an armed man allegedly charged towards the ballroom and shots were fired near a security checkpoint. Authorities said the suspect, identified as 31-year-old Cole Tomas Allen of California, was carrying firearms and knives before being taken into custody. No attendees were injured, although a Secret Service agent was struck in a bulletproof vest and later released from hospital. Guests at the event, including journalists and political figures, took cover as security agents evacuated Trump, Vice President JD Vance and First Lady Melania Trump from the venue. Trump later said he believed he had been the intended target and vowed the annual dinner would continue despite the incident.
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d0bc64 No.24599670
#45 - Part 45
Australian Politics and Society - Part 15
>>24540744 Donald Trump evacuated from Washington dinner as ‘shooter’ arrested - (Video) US President Donald Trump was evacuated from the White House Correspondents’ Dinner in Washington after a man allegedly armed with firearms and knives stormed a security checkpoint and opened fire near the ballroom. Authorities identified the suspect as 31-year-old Cole Thomas Allen of California, who was taken into custody and is expected to face multiple charges. A Secret Service officer was struck in a bulletproof vest but was not seriously injured. Guests, including senior US officials and journalists, took cover under tables as security agents rushed Trump, First Lady Melania Trump and Vice President JD Vance from the event. Trump later praised Secret Service officers for acting “quickly and bravely” and said the annual dinner would be rescheduled despite the incident.
>>24540768 Trump shooting: Anthony Albanese speaks out following Donald Trump’s attempted shooting in Washington - Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese and other world leaders have expressed relief after US President Donald Trump was safely evacuated following a shooting incident at the White House Correspondents’ Dinner in Washington. Albanese praised the “swift action” of the US Secret Service and law enforcement agencies after an armed man allegedly stormed a security checkpoint near the event attended by about 2500 guests. Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney said “political violence has no place in any democracy”, while Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said he was “shocked” by the attempted assassination. British ambassador Christian Turner also commended the “professional response” of security personnel. Trump and First Lady Melania Trump were unharmed, while a Secret Service officer injured during the incident was later released from hospital.
>>24544711 ‘Sitting ducks’: Hastie says overreliance on US has weakened Australia - (Video) Opposition industry and sovereign capability spokesman Andrew Hastie says Australia has become overly dependent on the United States for defence and must rebuild its own military and industrial capacity to strengthen the ANZUS alliance. In a speech at the Robert Menzies Institute, the former SAS soldier argued Australia had “outsourced” its security to the US over decades, weakening sovereign defence capabilities and strategic independence. Hastie warned the navy had not kept pace with missile and drone technology and said Australian forces could become “sitting ducks” without close US support in a major conflict. He also pointed to the US-Israeli war on Iran and global fuel instability as evidence Australia needed stronger domestic energy security, including expanded oil drilling and refining capability.
>>24544728 Australia’s long wait for a US ambassador just took a new turn - Australia’s prolonged wait for a permanent United States ambassador is set to continue, with acting embassy chief Erika Olson expected to leave Canberra in coming months without a replacement yet announced by President Donald Trump. Olson, who has served as Charge d’Affaires since former ambassador Caroline Kennedy departed after Trump’s election victory in late 2024, is reportedly moving to another diplomatic posting. The continued vacancy has fuelled concerns about strains in the Australia-US alliance amid disputes over tariffs, Iran and defence expectations, although analysts say long ambassadorial delays are common under the Trump administration. A White House official said a nomination was expected “soon”, while Republican congressman Michael McCaul has been discussed as a possible candidate. More than 100 US ambassadorial positions worldwide reportedly remain vacant.
>>24548222 Donald Trump taps Tea Party conservative David Brat as US ambassador to Australia - (Video) US President Donald Trump has nominated former Republican congressman David Brat as the next United States ambassador to Australia, ending a 15-month vacancy in the diplomatic role. Brat, a conservative economist and former Tea Party figure, rose to prominence after defeating senior Republican Eric Cantor in a shock 2014 primary upset widely seen as an early sign of the political movement that later fuelled Trump’s rise. Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said Australia would work constructively with “whoever is determined to be the ambassador”, while Foreign Minister Penny Wong welcomed the nomination and reaffirmed the importance of the alliance. Brat previously backed Trump’s agenda in Congress and campaigned strongly on border security, fiscal conservatism and opposition to “crony capitalism”. His appointment remains subject to US Senate confirmation.
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d0bc64 No.24599671
#45 - Part 46
Australian Politics and Society - Part 16
>>24555726 Man accused of booing at Anzac Day dawn service Welcome to Country in Sydney identified - (Video) A 24-year-old man accused of booing during the Welcome to Country at Sydney’s Anzac Day dawn service has defended his actions after being identified by media three days after the event. Police allege Eli Toby was involved in disruptions during the Martin Place ceremony that prompted widespread condemnation from political leaders, veterans and attendees. Speaking outside his parents’ home near Penrith, Toby said he was “not sorry for it” and argued he “should be able to say what I like”. The report also noted he had attended a neo-Nazi rally outside Parliament House last year. Witnesses at the dawn service described the disruption as “appalling” and distressing, while the incident has intensified broader public debate over Welcome to Country ceremonies and acknowledgments at national commemorative events.
>>24555802 Eli Toby: Man accused of booing Welcome to Country at the Anzac Day dawn service - A 24-year-old man accused of booing during the Welcome to Country at Sydney’s Anzac Day dawn service has been publicly identified after being confronted by a television reporter outside his family home near Penrith. Police allege Eli Toby was part of a group that disrupted the Martin Place ceremony during an address by Indigenous elder Uncle Ray Minniecon. Toby defended his actions, claiming the Welcome to Country was “not right” and saying he was “not sorry for it”. The incident drew widespread condemnation from political leaders, veterans and attendees, with Opposition Leader Angus Taylor describing the behaviour as “inappropriate and un-Australian”. NSW Police said Toby was charged with committing a nuisance at a war memorial and is due to appear in court in June.
>>24556563 Australia to sell fleet of Bushmasters to Netherlands, locks in commitment to build 268 more for itself - (Video) Australia will supply Bushmaster armoured vehicles to the Netherlands while committing $1.2 billion to build 268 additional Bushmasters for the Australian Army, alongside upgrades to Hawkei vehicles and military trucks. Defence Minister Richard Marles said the Australian-made Bushmaster and Hawkei were regarded as “world-leading protected mobility vehicles” and confirmed most new production would remain with the Australian Defence Force. The investment will sustain production at Thales’ Bendigo facility until 2033 and support hundreds of defence industry jobs. Some Bushmasters will also be adapted for the StrikeMaster project, which mounts Naval Strike Missiles capable of targeting enemy ships and land positions at long range. Defence Industry Minister Pat Conroy said future variants could include laser-based systems designed to destroy drones.
>>24556743 eSafety Commissioner Julie Inman Grant stares down abuse, death threats - Australia’s eSafety Commissioner Julie Inman Grant says regulators facing intense online abuse may require security protections similar to those provided to politicians, after enduring widespread threats linked to the government’s social media restrictions for children. Inman Grant said billionaire Elon Musk publicly labelled her a “censorship commissar” following the announcement of Australia’s social media age limits, triggering tens of thousands of hostile posts, including alleged death threats, doxxing and deepfakes targeting her and her family. Speaking with former prime minister Julia Gillard, she said much of the abuse was “gendered” and designed to intimidate women in leadership roles. Despite the attacks, Inman Grant said the experience had strengthened her resolve, arguing that attempts to silence regulators only made her “dig in” further on online safety reforms.
>>24556785 Multinational Forces Validate Defensive Readiness During Exercise Balikatan 2026 - More than 500 military personnel from the United States, Philippines, Australia and New Zealand have conducted a large-scale counter-landing live-fire exercise during Exercise Balikatan 2026, simulating the defence of a beachhead against an amphibious assault. Forces coordinated missile systems, fighter aircraft, mortars, machine guns and anti-armour weapons through a combined multinational command structure designed to integrate intelligence, surveillance and real-time targeting. Australian troops from the 5th/7th Battalion, Royal Australian Regiment, joined Philippine, US and New Zealand forces in what organisers described as the first four-nation counter-landing live-fire event held during Balikatan. Philippine military spokesman Colonel Dennis Hernandez said the exercise strengthened “precision, speed and overwhelming coordination”, while Australian commander Lieutenant Colonel Benjamin Woolmer said the training reinforced “shoulder-to-shoulder” co-operation between allied forces.
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d0bc64 No.24599672
#45 - Part 47
Australian Politics and Society - Part 17
>>24556959 Hegseth notes Australia’s defence spending hike, says there’s more to do - US Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth has welcomed Australia’s planned increase in military spending but signalled Washington expects further commitments before Canberra is regarded as a leading Indo-Pacific ally. In testimony to Congress, Hegseth praised Australia’s latest National Defence Strategy and support for AUKUS while emphasising the Trump administration’s focus on “burden sharing” among allies. He pointed to South Korea and Japan as examples of nations sharply increasing defence investment, while Pentagon policy chief Elbridge Colby said the United States wanted “partners - not dependencies”. Australia recently announced plans to raise defence spending to 3 per cent of gross domestic product by 2033, although the Trump administration has previously pushed for a higher 3.5 per cent target. Hegseth also revealed the US campaign in Iran had cost at least $US25 billion.
>>24556964 Japan’s first female Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi to visit Australia as fuel security talks intensify - Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi will visit Australia next week for talks with Anthony Albanese as both nations confront mounting fuel security concerns linked to the Iran conflict and disruptions in the Strait of Hormuz. The visit, Takaichi’s first to Australia since taking office, coincides with Foreign Minister Penny Wong’s regional diplomacy campaign aimed at securing reliable fuel and fertiliser supplies from key Asian partners. Albanese said Australia and Japan shared “strong strategic alignment” and highlighted the importance of maintaining stable trade and investment ties. Australia exports significant quantities of liquefied natural gas, coal and iron ore to Japan, while Japan supplies large volumes of diesel to Australia. Wong is expected to stress the need for uninterrupted two-way trade and energy flows during discussions across the region.
>>24561233 Australia in talks over latest US proposal to open Strait of Hormuz, but PM says 'no determination' made - (Video) Prime Minister Anthony Albanese says Australia is discussing a United States-led proposal to reopen the Strait of Hormuz, but “no determination” has been made on military support. The Trump administration is seeking allied participation in a “Maritime Freedom Construct” to restore commercial shipping and freedom of navigation after conflict disrupted the key waterway. Mr Albanese said Australia was engaging privately with the United States and partners including the United Kingdom and France, while stressing the government wanted “de-escalation” and “peace in the region”. Foreign Minister Penny Wong confirmed Australia had been briefed on the proposal and was considering options after already providing “defensive and diplomatic support”. United States Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth also renewed calls for greater allied defence contributions and stronger co-operation through the Australia-United Kingdom-United States (AUKUS) partnership.
>>24566300 Fiji considers state of emergency over drugs and gangs as police and military crackdown ramps up - Fiji Prime Minister Sitiveni Rabuka says the country could enter a state of emergency as police and military forces expand a nationwide crackdown on drug gangs and organised crime networks. Joint checkpoints have been established across Fiji amid growing concern the country is becoming a gateway for cartels targeting Australian and New Zealand markets. The proposal has triggered unease because former prime minister Frank Bainimarama previously used emergency powers during military rule. The crackdown follows the suspected murder of alleged underworld figure Jone Vakarisi during military interrogation, with Fiji police now treating the death as homicide after reports of traumatic injuries contradicted the military’s original account. Human rights groups and some commentators have questioned the military’s role in policing operations and warned against possible overreach and restrictions on civil liberties.
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d0bc64 No.24599673
#45 - Part 48
Australian Politics and Society - Part 18
>>24566687 Saved by the bell: How the King charmed Trump and elevated Australia - King Charles III’s visit to Washington has been hailed by foreign policy analysts as a diplomatic success after he used a White House state dinner to reinforce support for the Australia-United Kingdom-United States (AUKUS) partnership and strengthen ties with President Donald Trump. During the visit, the King presented Mr Trump with the bell from HMS Trump, a British-made submarine later attached to an Australian squadron, describing it as an “AUKUS predecessor”. The symbolic gesture drew praise from supporters of the trilateral security pact in Washington. The visit also coincided with the Trump administration nominating former Republican congressman David Brat as United States ambassador to Australia, while continuing pressure on Canberra over defence spending targets, technology regulation and tariffs affecting American companies operating in Australia and broader bilateral strategic co-operation efforts.
>>24569442 Alleged Anzac Day hecklers face court over 2025 Shrine of Remembrance booing - Four men accused of disrupting Melbourne’s 2025 Anzac Day Dawn Service have faced court, with witnesses describing the alleged booing and heckling as “disgusting” and deeply disrespectful. Jacob Hersant, Nathan Bull, Michael Nelson and Ballarat dentist Ian Lomax are contesting charges including offensive behaviour and breaches of the Shrine of Remembrance Regulations Act. Prosecutors told the Melbourne Magistrates’ Court the disruptions began during a Welcome to Country delivered by elder Mark Brown, with yelling and booing allegedly audible across the crowd. Witnesses said attendees repeatedly urged the men to “show respect” during the ceremony. Mr Hersant, Mr Bull and Mr Nelson, identified in court as white supremacists, are representing themselves and plan to argue the case involves “political communication”. Prosecutors are expected to call up to 12 witnesses during the five-day hearing.
>>24569445 Jacob Hersant, Nathan Bull, Michael Nelson, Ian Lomax: Quartet accused of offensive behaviour at 2025 Anzac Day Dawn Service - Retiree Nigel Meinrath has told a Melbourne court he was “disgusted” by alleged disruptions during the 2025 Anzac Day Dawn Service at the Shrine of Remembrance, where four men are accused of offensive behaviour and breaching shrine regulations. Jacob Hersant, Nathan Bull, Michael Nelson and Ian Lomax allegedly booed and yelled slogans during a Welcome to Country delivered by elder Mark Brown and later during remarks by Victorian Governor Margaret Gardner. Prosecutors said some statements referenced “white Australians” and opposition to the ceremony. Witnesses told the court attendees repeatedly asked the men to “show respect” during the service. Mr Hersant, Mr Bull and Mr Nelson are representing themselves and intend to argue their conduct involved protected “political communication”, while Mr Lomax denies engaging in conduct amounting to the alleged offences.
>>24569450 Sanae Takaichi visit: Japan's PM arrives in Australia to discuss China and energy security - (Video) Former senior defence official Richard Gray says Australia should consider leasing submarines from Japan as a fallback option if the Australia-United Kingdom-United States (AUKUS) nuclear submarine program encounters major delays or capability gaps. The proposal comes as Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi arrives in Canberra for talks with Prime Minister Anthony Albanese focused on energy security, critical minerals and China’s regional influence. Mr Gray said Japan’s modern diesel-electric submarine fleet could provide Australia with an interim sovereign capability if problems emerge with the Collins-class extension program or planned United States Virginia-class acquisitions. Former Japanese ambassador Shingo Yamagami urged Australia and Japan to “speak with one voice” in the Indo-Pacific amid concerns the Trump administration’s focus on Iran could create a regional “power vacuum” that China may seek to exploit.
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d0bc64 No.24599674
#45 - Part 49
Australian Politics and Society - Part 19
>>24569454 Japan to test more advanced weaponry in Australia as ‘quasi allies’ deepen co-operation - (Video) Japan and Australia have agreed to deepen defence co-operation, including expanded testing of advanced weapons systems in Australia, during talks between Prime Minister Anthony Albanese and Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi in Canberra. A joint statement identified “testing of new equipment, advanced weapons and emerging technologies” as a priority as both nations strengthen military ties amid regional security concerns linked to China. Ms Takaichi described the relationship as operating at a level comparable to “quasi-allies”, while Mr Albanese said the countries had “never been more strategically aligned”. The discussions also covered energy security, critical minerals and cybersecurity co-operation. Separately, former defence official Richard Gray urged Australia to consider leasing Japanese diesel-electric submarines if the AUKUS nuclear submarine program faces delays, although Foreign Minister Penny Wong reaffirmed Canberra remained committed to AUKUS.
>>24576525 Man charged with hate speech after neo-Nazi rally outside NSW Parliament House - Neo-Nazi Joel Davis has been charged with publicly inciting racial hatred after speaking at a National Socialist Network rally outside NSW Parliament House in November 2025. More than 60 black-clad demonstrators attended the protest, chanting “blood and honour” and displaying banners targeting the Jewish community. Police allege Davis used a megaphone to spread offensive conspiracy theories during the gathering. The charge was laid under relatively new NSW hate speech laws introduced by the Labor government. Davis, 31, was granted conditional bail and is due to appear in court next month. NSW Police Minister Yasmin Catley said people had a right to protest but not to “target Jewish people, intimidate communities or incite racial hatred”. The National Socialist Network earlier claimed it had disbanded to avoid potential prohibition under federal hate group laws.
>>24589344 Dancin’ Hanson: Liberal Party left on 12pc in One Nation’s Farrer landslide - (Video) Pauline Hanson says One Nation’s shock victory in the Farrer by-election can be replicated nationally after the party captured the formerly safe Liberal seat with a swing exceeding 30 per cent. One Nation candidate David Farley defeated both the Liberals and Climate 200-backed independent Michelle Milthorpe, marking the party’s first House of Representatives win in its 29-year history. Former Liberal leader Sussan Ley said the result showed the party must “change or die”, while Liberal leader Angus Taylor conceded voters had lost trust in the Coalition and pledged reform. Former Nationals leader Barnaby Joyce, who campaigned against the Liberals, hailed the result as a broader warning to major parties. One Nation campaigned strongly on immigration, regional neglect and dissatisfaction with established political parties.
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d0bc64 No.24599675
#45 - Part 50
Australian Politics and Society - Part 20
>>24589378 Hanson takes victory lap in Farrer and warns major parties ‘we’re coming after other seats’ - (Video) Pauline Hanson has vowed One Nation will target more federal seats after the party won the Farrer by-election, ending 77 years of Coalition control in the regional NSW electorate. One Nation candidate David Farley secured the party’s first lower house seat, defeating Climate 200-backed independent Michelle Milthorpe while the Liberals collapsed to 12 per cent of the primary vote. Hanson said voters were no longer willing to be “forgotten people” and promised stronger action on immigration and energy policy. Liberal leader Angus Taylor admitted Coalition instability and internal divisions had damaged voter trust, while former Nationals leader Barnaby Joyce described the result as a sign Australian politics had fundamentally changed. Voters cited cost-of-living pressures, regional neglect, migration and energy concerns as key issues influencing the outcome.
>>24592911 Australian-born Catherine West gives Sir Keir Starmer one day to quit or face leadership challenge - (Video) Australian-born Labour MP Catherine West has threatened to launch a leadership challenge against British Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer unless Labour reshuffles its leadership within days following severe election losses across Britain. West, who was born in Mansfield, Victoria, said Sir Keir should move into an international role while Labour installed a new prime minister “with minimum fuss”. The pressure follows major local election defeats in England, Wales and Scotland, with dozens of Labour backbenchers publicly calling for Sir Keir to resign. West acknowledged she may act as a “stalking horse” candidate if broader support for a leadership spill emerges within the parliamentary party.
>>24592941 One Nation believes migrants are on their side as they target Labor - (Video) Pauline Hanson says One Nation will target migrant-heavy Labor electorates following the party’s breakthrough Farrer by-election victory, arguing many migrants do not want Australia to become “like the place they left”. Hanson identified western Sydney seats held by senior Labor ministers Chris Bowen and Tony Burke as future targets after One Nation secured its first House of Representatives seat with a swing exceeding 30 per cent. Former Nationals leader Barnaby Joyce said multicultural working-class communities were increasingly receptive to One Nation’s message, pointing to strong support in Griffith and other diverse areas within Farrer. Liberal MPs acknowledged the result may force greater cooperation and preference deals with One Nation in future elections. Internal Liberal concerns have also intensified about party organisation, volunteer numbers and the ability to reconnect with conservative and regional voters.
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d0bc64 No.24599676
#45 - Part 51
Virginia Roberts Giuffre - Life and Legacy
>>24466593 Giuffre’s family urges King Charles to meet Epstein survivors during US visit - The family of Virginia Giuffre has called on King Charles to meet with Epstein survivors during his upcoming United States visit, saying the trip coincides closely with the anniversary of her death and presents an opportunity for engagement. Giuffre’s relatives said they “strongly urge” the King to hear directly from survivors, while acknowledging his past decision to strip his brother, Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor, of royal duties following the allegations. Palace officials have previously maintained the monarch cannot intervene while related investigations remain ongoing. Giuffre had accused Epstein of trafficking her to Mountbatten-Windsor, who has denied the claims and settled a civil case without admission of wrongdoing. The state visit comes as Britain seeks to steady relations with US President Donald Trump after tensions over the Iran war, placing additional attention on the monarch’s program in Washington.
>>24544743 Memorial held to mark one year since the death of Virginia Giuffre - (Video) A memorial has been held marking one year since the death of Virginia Giuffre, the most high-profile victim of convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein. She took her own life on a farm in Western Australia last year. Ms Giuffre was known for accusing Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor of sexually abusing her when she was just 17 years old. The 66-year-old former prince has denied the allegations. Ms Giuffre’s family members and other survivors of Epstein praised her courage at the event. - Sky News Australia, Apr 26, 2026
>>24544749 Epstein fallout: Virginia Giuffre remembered as ‘hero to the ages’ on first anniversary of her death - Virginia Giuffre was honoured at a memorial in Washington marking one year since her death, with survivors, advocates and US lawmakers praising her role in exposing Jeffrey Epstein’s sex-trafficking network and speaking publicly against Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor. Giuffre’s brother Sky Roberts said “you changed the world”, while Democratic congressman Jamie Raskin described her as “a hero to the ages”. Advocates used the event to promote “Virginia’s Law”, proposed legislation removing time limits for adult survivors pursuing civil claims over sexual abuse. Organisers also signalled plans to increase pressure for accountability during King Charles’ expected US visit. Mountbatten-Windsor has always denied Giuffre’s allegations and settled civil proceedings in 2022 without admitting wrongdoing. Giuffre died at her property north of Perth last year aged 41.
>>24544749 Q Post #4923 - https://twitter.com/VRSVirginia/status/1319071346282778624 - Dearest Virginia - We stand with you. Now and always. Find peace through prayer. Never give up the good fight. God bless you. Q - https://qanon.pub/#4923 - https://qanon.pub/#4568
>>24592963 Virginia Giuffre’s family seeks coronial inquest, says she was ‘let down’ in final months - Virginia Giuffre’s brothers have requested a public coronial inquest and police review into the circumstances surrounding her death, arguing she was “let down” by authorities in the months before she died by suicide in Western Australia. The family says Giuffre repeatedly sought police help over alleged domestic violence, coercive control and fears for her safety during divorce proceedings with her estranged husband, Robert Giuffre. They raised concerns that Giuffre may have been wrongly characterised as a perpetrator after an interim family violence restraining order was granted against her shortly after she reported an alleged assault. The family has asked WA Police to review frontline responses, risk assessments and domestic violence procedures. The WA Coroner confirmed investigations into Giuffre’s death remain ongoing, with no decision yet on a public inquest.
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d0bc64 No.24599677
#45 - Part 52
Afghanistan War Crimes Allegations - Ben Roberts-Smith Murder Trial - Part 1
>>24474213 War Crime Murders:Ben Roberts-Smith arrested over alleged killings; five war crime murder charges carry life sentence- (Video) Australia’s most decorated soldier Ben Roberts-Smith has been arrested and charged with five counts of war crime murder, with authorities alleging the killings of unarmed Afghan civilians and detainees between 2009 and 2012. The former Special Air Service soldier was taken into custody at Sydney Airport after arriving on a commercial flight and has been transferred to custody ahead of a bail hearing, facing potential life imprisonment if convicted. Australian Federal Police Commissioner Krissy Barrett said it would be alleged the victims were “detained, unarmed” and under the control of Australian Defence Force personnel when they were killed, including cases where others allegedly acted on his orders. The charges follow a five-year investigation, with officials describing the arrest as a “significant step” and confirming further charges against others remain possible as inquiries continue despite challenges accessing evidence since the Taliban takeover of Afghanistan in 2021.
>>24474276 Former Australian soldier arrested over alleged war crimes - (Video) A former Australian Defence Force member has been arrested at Sydney Domestic Airport and is expected to be charged with five counts of war crime - murder following a joint investigation by the Australian Federal Police (AFP) and the Office of the Special Investigator. The 47-year-old man faces allegations he "intentionally caused the death" of individuals or "aided, abetted, counselled or procured" killings during deployments in Afghanistan between 2009 and 2012, including incidents in Kakarak, Darwan and Syahchow in Uruzgan Province. The offences carry a maximum penalty of life imprisonment. The investigation, launched in 2021, is examining alleged breaches of the Laws of Armed Conflict by Australian personnel between 2005 and 2016, with dozens of matters finalised and others still under active investigation.
>>24474281 AFP Commissioner opening statement following arrest of former Australian soldier - (Video) "Good afternoon. A former Australian Defence Force member has today been arrested and will be charged with five counts of War Crime – Murder after a joint investigation between the Office of the Special Investigator (OSI) and the AFP. The former soldier was arrested at Sydney’s Domestic Airport this morning and is expected to face a NSW court later today. It will be alleged the man was a member of the ADF when he was involved in the death of Afghan nationals between 2009 and 2012 in circumstances that constitute war crimes under the Commonwealth Criminal Code. The offence of War Crime - Murder carries a maximum penalty of life imprisonment. It will be alleged the victims were not taking part in hostilities at the time of their alleged murder in Afghanistan. It will be alleged the victims were detained, unarmed and were under the control of ADF members when they were killed. It will be alleged the victims were shot by the accused, or shot by subordinate members of the ADF, in the presence of, and acting on the orders of, the accused. Operation Emerald-Argon, began in 2021, and is a joint investigation between the Office of the Special Investigator and the AFP. It has been a complex investigation that has been undertaken thoroughly and meticulously. We understand these charges will have an impact on several communities in Australia. Whenever I give a press conference, I do not just provide the facts in front of me, but I also address those impacted the most. So, I want to now directly address the concerns and questions some may have. The alleged conduct related to these charges is confined to a very small section of our trusted and respected ADF, which helps keep this country safe. The overwhelming majority of our ADF do our country proud. Today’s charges are not reflective of the majority members who serve under our Australian flag with honour, distinction and with the values of a democratic nation. Today, is a day to rally behind the ADF, and be mindful of the families whose loved ones have died while serving our country. Those charged, or facing charges under these joint investigations, will face the justice system in Australia. This is my message to the families of victims and the Australian community who want and deserve answers. Furthermore, this investigation remains ongoing. I encourage those who have relevant information to come forward to the OSI if they have not yet done so." - Krissy Barrett, Australian Federal Police Commissioner
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d0bc64 No.24599678
#45 - Part 53
Afghanistan War Crimes Allegations - Ben Roberts-Smith Murder Trial - Part 2
>>24474323 Ben Roberts-Smith charged with multiple war crimes - Australia’s most decorated living soldier has been charged with five counts of war crime - murder following his arrest at Sydney Airport after a joint Australian Federal Police (AFP) and Office of the Special Investigator investigation. It will be alleged he "intentionally caused the death" of unarmed Afghan civilians and prisoners or directed others to do so between 2009 and 2012, including incidents where victims were "not taking part in hostilities" and were "detained, unarmed and under the control" of Australian Defence Force personnel. Prosecutors will allege he executed detainees, kicked a civilian off a cliff and ordered subordinates to carry out killings, including so-called “blooding” incidents. Witnesses, including former Special Air Service soldiers, are expected to testify they saw or were directed to participate in executions of defenceless detainees. The charges carry a maximum penalty of life imprisonment, marking one of the most significant war crimes prosecutions in Australian history.
>>24474332 COMMENTARY: War crimes prosecutors will face challenges convicting Ben Roberts-Smith - "Ben Roberts-Smith has known for a long time that this moment would come. The former SAS soldier is to be charged with five counts of war crimes, including murders he allegedly took part in while serving in Afghanistan. If convicted, he faces the possibility of life in prison. The defamation action he brought to try to prove himself innocent ended as a spectacular own goal. To Roberts-Smith’s disbelief, former comrades-in-arms lined up to testify against him. That evidence in itself, given in a civil case, cannot be used against him in a criminal trial. But the defamation action allowed war crimes investigators from the Australian Federal Police and the Office of the Special Investigator to identify members and former members of the SAS who were willing to break the elite service’s code of silence. If the Victoria Cross recipient had left it to prosecutors to build a criminal case against him, that might never have happened - or least, not to the level that they could be confident they could achieve a conviction. They’ve taken five years just to get this far. Prosecutors aren’t allowed to go on fishing expeditions. Roberts-Smith saved them the problem by bringing his own case before they did. But proving war crimes offences to the criminal standard - that is, beyond reasonable doubt – will be much more difficult for commonwealth prosecutors than it was for Nine’s defamation defence team to prove them on the balance of probabilities. Office of Special Investigations director Ross Barnett made that clear in Tuesday’s otherwise uninformative press conference when he listed the difficulties OSI investigators had faced in gathering evidence from a country then at war and now ruled by the Taliban. The Crown prosecutor bears the burden of investigators who had little or no access to civilian witnesses, and no access to the crime scene, or even to the deceased, to conduct a post mortem. Some of the soldiers who gave evidence against Roberts-Smith in the defamation trial didn’t have to testify about their own sins on the battlefield, let alone be cross-examined on them. They may be reluctant to give evidence in a criminal case. Roberts-Smith had powerful backers in his defamation case, among them two of Australia’s richest people, billionaires Kerry Stokes and Gina Rinehart. They are unlikely to desert him as he gathers together what will be a formidable legal team to defend himself against the charges. This case has divided the nation like no other. Australia’s most decorated soldier lost his reputation in a failed defamation case. If he ultimately beats these charges, he will have won it back at a very high price." - Stephen Rice, The Australian
>>24478314 Ben Roberts-Smith to remain behind bars for more than a week after bail hearing - (Video) Former soldier Ben Roberts-Smith will remain in custody at Sydney’s Silverwater Metropolitan Remand and Reception Centre until at least April 17 after his legal team did not seek immediate bail following his arrest on five counts of war crime - murder. The charges relate to alleged killings of unarmed Afghan detainees between 2009 and 2012, with prosecutors alleging victims were "not armed" and were "shot by the accused, or shot by subordinate members… acting on the orders of the accused". Former prime minister John Howard said the case would "test to the limits" public respect for the rule of law while stressing no individual is above it. Supporters, including Gina Rinehart, criticised the prosecution, as authorities confirmed further investigations remain ongoing.
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d0bc64 No.24599679
#45 - Part 54
Afghanistan War Crimes Allegations - Ben Roberts-Smith Murder Trial - Part 3
>>24483958 Inside Ben Roberts-Smith’s harsh Sydney prison - (Video) Former soldier Ben Roberts-Smith has entered the Silverwater Metropolitan Remand and Reception Centre as a high-profile inmate after being charged with five counts of war crime - murder, marking a sharp shift from public prominence to strict custodial conditions. He has been processed through standard intake procedures, issued prison clothing, assigned an identification number and placed under protection arrangements, allowing him to remain in a single cell while housed among other remand prisoners. Authorities say he will spend extended periods confined, with limited daily exercise, monitored communications and tightly controlled routines typical of maximum-security remand facilities. The 47-year-old is expected to remain in custody until at least April 17, when he is due to reappear in court for a bail application, with the case set to unfold over an extended period.
>>24484093 ‘An utter disgrace’: National war museum urged to act on Ben Roberts-Smith display - Senior historians and former officials have criticised the Australian War Memorial for retaining Ben Roberts-Smith’s uniform and equipment in its Hall of Valour after he was charged with five counts of war crime - murder, arguing the display undermines historical accuracy. University of New South Wales historian and former Australian War Memorial deputy director Michael McKernan described the decision as "ludicrous" and an "utter disgrace", while UNSW Canberra historian and former principal historian at the memorial Peter Stanley said the display should be relocated to reflect the consequences of the Afghanistan conflict and “tell the truth”. University of Canberra historian Frank Bongiorno also questioned the memorial’s approach, citing its role as a national institution shaping public memory. The memorial said it would review the wording of its interpretive panel while monitoring developments, maintaining that curatorial decisions remain independent. Veterans’ Affairs Minister Matt Keogh said the institution’s role was to present the full story of conflict, including controversial aspects, as debate continues over how to represent the legacy of a decorated soldier facing serious criminal charges.
>>24484331 Top lawyer joins Ben Roberts-Smith’s defence for ‘trial of the decade’ - Ben Roberts-Smith has begun assembling a legal team to fight five counts of war crime - murder, with the case expected to become one of the most significant criminal trials in Australia. High-profile criminal lawyer Karen Espiner has joined the defence, bringing experience from representing fellow accused war crimes defendant Oliver Schulz. Other senior counsel under consideration include Arthur Moses SC, known for his military law expertise, Bruce McClintock SC, who previously worked on the defamation case, and Bret Walker SC, who led appeal proceedings. Media and commercial lawyer Monica Allen has also been identified as a potential inclusion due to her detailed knowledge of the case. The defence team’s final composition may depend on financial backing from supporters such as Kerry Stokes and Gina Rinehart, with government assistance schemes expected to cover only basic legal costs.
>>24484464 From war hero to accused serial killer: The unravelling of Ben Roberts-Smith - The arrest of Ben Roberts-Smith on five counts of war crime - murder marks a dramatic escalation in a long-running saga that has reshaped his public standing from decorated soldier to accused criminal. It will be alleged he was involved in the killing of unarmed Afghan civilians and detainees between 2009 and 2012, with claims emerging from eyewitness accounts by former Special Air Service colleagues who later testified publicly. The case follows years of investigations, a failed defamation action and civil court findings that allegations of unlawful killings were proven on the balance of probabilities. Authorities have since built a criminal brief drawing on witness testimony, including accounts of detainees being killed after capture. Supporters, including prominent political and business figures, have continued to defend him, while investigators gathered evidence in Australia and overseas despite operational challenges. The matter will now be tested in court under the criminal standard of proof beyond reasonable doubt.
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d0bc64 No.24599680
#45 - Part 55
Afghanistan War Crimes Allegations - Ben Roberts-Smith Murder Trial - Part 4
>>24484599 Kill boards, trophy hunting and ‘blooding’: What courts have already heard about Ben Roberts-Smith’s alleged crimes - Allegations aired in court proceedings have detailed a series of killings involving unarmed Afghan civilians and detainees that prosecutors are expected to rely on in a criminal trial against Ben Roberts-Smith. Evidence previously accepted in a civil case described victims as "not a threat" and under Australian control, with claims they were killed after capture. Testimony outlined alleged practices including “blooding” recruits by ordering them to shoot detainees, the use of “throw-down” weapons to stage scenes, and informal “kill boards” tracking deaths. Specific incidents include the alleged killing of a detainee with a prosthetic leg during the Whiskey 108 mission in Kakarak, the fatal shooting of prisoners in that operation, and the killing of a farmer in Darwan. Further allegations relate to operations in Syahchow, Chinartu and Fasil, where detainees were allegedly executed or killed after capture. While some allegations were proven to the civil standard, others were not, and the case will now be tested under the higher criminal threshold of proof beyond reasonable doubt.
>>24484743 His brother’s leg became a grisly trophy. Now, he wants justice - Families of Afghan men allegedly killed on the orders of Ben Roberts-Smith have welcomed his arrest on five counts of war crime - murder while criticising the years taken to bring charges. Relatives of victims, including Esmatullah, whose brother Ahmadullah and father Mohammad Essa were allegedly executed in 2009, said they were "very, very happy" but wanted to know what would happen next. The case also includes the alleged killing of Ali Jan in 2012. Evidence aired in prior proceedings alleged Ahmadullah’s prosthetic leg was taken after his death and later used by soldiers as a drinking vessel, a detail that became a defining symbol of alleged misconduct and breakdown of discipline. Members of the Afghan diaspora in Australia described mixed reactions, with some viewing the arrest as a step toward justice, while others questioned the focus on one soldier amid Taliban rule and ongoing suffering.
>>24484771 Hastie could testify in Roberts-Smith murder trial - Shadow defence minister and former Special Air Service captain Andrew Hastie says he may be called as a witness in the criminal trial of Ben Roberts-Smith, who has been charged with five counts of war crime - murder over alleged actions in Afghanistan between 2009 and 2012. Hastie, one of multiple veterans subpoenaed in earlier defamation proceedings, said it was possible he would again give evidence, noting he had previously testified under oath. He emphasised the importance of preserving the integrity of the legal process, stating Roberts-Smith was entitled to the presumption of innocence and a fair trial free from political interference. Hastie also said Australia must acknowledge “wrongdoing” identified in past investigations while recognising that the conduct of a small number of individuals did not define the broader Australian Defence Force.
>>24490990 A cop once shot by a jailbreaker and a stickler for detail: The crime fighters who built the case against Ben Roberts-Smith - (Video) The prosecution case against Ben Roberts-Smith has been built over years by the Office of the Special Investigator and Australian Federal Police, relying heavily on eyewitness testimony from former Special Air Service soldiers who served alongside him in Afghanistan. Investigators led by operations head Ross Barnett, a former Queensland detective, and senior homicide investigator Matt Stock assembled evidence despite major obstacles, including no access to crime scenes, victims or forensic material overseas. Authorities focused on allegations supported by direct witness accounts, discarding cases that could not meet the criminal standard of proof beyond reasonable doubt. The inquiry also required separating admissible evidence from earlier investigations to avoid legal complications and ensure the case could withstand scrutiny in court. Officials say the prosecution will hinge on testimony from multiple former soldiers expected to be called as witnesses, as proceedings move toward a complex trial likely to run for years.
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d0bc64 No.24599681
#45 - Part 56
Afghanistan War Crimes Allegations - Ben Roberts-Smith Murder Trial - Part 5
>>24491019 Ben Roberts-Smith could stay in jail over claims of ‘flight risk’ - Ben Roberts-Smith could remain in custody for an extended period if prosecutors oppose bail on the grounds he is a flight risk following charges of five counts of war crime - murder. Commonwealth lawyers are expected to argue the severity of potential life sentences increases the risk of him fleeing or interfering with witnesses, while the defence is likely to counter that he has previously travelled overseas and returned voluntarily. Legal sources suggest bail is still likely but could come with strict conditions, including reporting requirements and limits on contact with former colleagues. Roberts-Smith’s legal team, led by Karen Espiner with barristers Slade Howell and James Godbolt, will argue custody would hinder preparation for a complex case expected to take years to reach trial.
>>24491027 Australian War Memorial amends Ben Roberts-Smith display after former soldier charged with war crimes - (Video) The Australian War Memorial has updated its Hall of Valour display for Ben Roberts-Smith to reflect his charge with five counts of war crime - murder, with new wording noting the legal process is ongoing. The revised plaque now devotes significant space to events since 2016, replacing earlier text that stated he had not faced criminal charges. Memorial director Matt Anderson said the changes were made to ensure the display remained accurate and up to date, while emphasising the importance of the presumption of innocence and a fair trial. Roberts-Smith’s uniform, medals and equipment will remain on display, with the memorial maintaining they relate to his Victoria Cross actions in Afghanistan. The updated display is expected to remain in place as legal proceedings continue and public scrutiny persists.
>>24494451 Federal MP Luke Gosling warns colleagues against Ben Roberts-Smith commentary - Labor MP and former soldier Luke Gosling has urged federal politicians to avoid public commentary on the arrest of Ben Roberts-Smith, warning it could jeopardise a fair trial. In a message to colleagues, Gosling said the case had divided the veteran community, with some supporting the former soldier while others, including potential witnesses, were experiencing “moral injury and distress” over alleged events in Afghanistan. He cautioned that some former Special Air Service personnel may be called to testify and stressed the importance of allowing the legal process to proceed without interference. The warning follows public statements from several political figures, prompting concern about prejudicing proceedings, as Roberts-Smith remains in custody and prepares to face a bail hearing.
>>24494454 ‘There’s no fog of war’: Former SAS veteran speaks out amid Ben Roberts-Smith alleged war crimes - (Video) A former Special Air Service soldier has spoken publicly following the arrest of Ben Roberts-Smith, alleging the accused was involved in unlawful killings of non-combatants during deployments in Afghanistan between 2009 and 2012. The veteran said the alleged actions occurred after combat had ended, stating “there’s no fog of war” and “no bullets flying around”, and described the conduct as “completely contrary to (the) mission”. He said “we weren’t there to kill civilians”, adding those who spoke out had been “vilified” despite showing “moral courage”. The comments come as Roberts-Smith faces five counts of war crime - murder, including alleged killings at Kakarak, Darwan and Syahchow. Former war crimes prosecutor Graeme Blewett said the trial would be complex, noting “you can never predict what a jury thinks of a case”.
>>24512269 Ben Roberts-Smith granted bail in Sydney court - Former Special Air Service corporal Ben Roberts-Smith has been granted bail after being charged with five war crimes counts over the alleged murders of unarmed detainees in Afghanistan. Judge Greg Grogin ruled there were “exceptional circumstances” justifying release after 10 days in custody, noting bail is “not punitive in nature” and Roberts-Smith is entitled to the presumption of innocence. The court heard any trial could take years, with concerns raised that secrecy provisions may “severely restrict” access to legal material if he remained in custody. Prosecutors opposed bail, citing the “gravely serious” nature of the allegations and potential risks of flight and interference with witnesses, but the judge found strict conditions could mitigate those risks. Roberts-Smith, who denies the charges, faces life imprisonment if convicted.
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d0bc64 No.24599682
#45 - Part 57
Afghanistan War Crimes Allegations - Ben Roberts-Smith Murder Trial - Part 6
>>24512280 Former soldier Ben Roberts-Smith granted bail over alleged war crime of murder offences - (Video) Former Special Air Service corporal Ben Roberts-Smith has been granted bail after more than a week in custody over five alleged war crime murders in Afghanistan, with a Sydney court finding “exceptional circumstances” justified his release. Judge Greg Grogin said the case could take years and bail was “not punitive in nature”, noting concerns about access to evidence and the ability to prepare a defence from custody. Prosecutors argued the charges were “gravely serious” and pointed to risks of flight and interference with witnesses. Defence lawyers said the matter involved “uncharted legal territory” and warned prolonged pre-trial publicity could mean a fair trial was “simply not possible”, as strict conditions were imposed to mitigate risks.
>>24512317 Ben Roberts-Smith released from prison amid chaotic scenes - (Video) Former Special Air Service corporal Ben Roberts-Smith has been released on bail after 10 days in custody over five alleged war crime murders in Afghanistan, as court documents detail evidence from four soldiers who admitted killing detainees on his orders. Prosecutors allege the victims were unarmed, handcuffed and under Australian control, with evidence staged to portray the killings as lawful, including claims of planted items and fabricated combat scenarios. Witnesses granted immunity have provided accounts of acting “at the direction or with the complicity” of Roberts-Smith, who denies the allegations. Judge Greg Grogin granted bail citing “exceptional circumstances”, including expected lengthy delays and challenges accessing evidence, while warning strict conditions would apply. The case, following a five-year investigation, is expected to take years, with dozens of soldiers likely to be called as witnesses.
>>24512324 Ben Roberts-Smith leaves Silverwater prison, free on bail, ahead of war crimes trial - (Video) Former Special Air Service corporal Ben Roberts-Smith has been released from Silverwater prison on strict bail conditions after being charged with five war crime murders allegedly committed in Afghanistan between 2009 and 2012. Judge Greg Grogin found “exceptional circumstances” justified bail, citing the presumption of innocence, the likelihood the case would take years to reach trial and concerns that access to sensitive national security material could “severely restrict” his ability to prepare a defence in custody. Roberts-Smith must surrender his passport, report regularly to police and avoid contact with witnesses, with a $250,000 surety imposed. Prosecutors opposed bail, arguing the charges were “amongst the most serious”, while the defence said the case involved “uncharted legal territory” and would face prolonged delays.
>>24512331 ‘Executions’ and immunity: prosecutors give soldiers deals to testify against Ben Roberts-Smith - Prosecutors have granted immunity to four Australian soldiers who admitted involvement in executing detainees, securing their testimony in the war crimes case against former Special Air Service corporal Ben Roberts-Smith. Court documents allege the soldiers acted “at the direction or with the complicity” of Roberts-Smith, with their accounts forming a central part of the prosecution’s case. The allegations include claims detainees were handcuffed and killed, with evidence staged to portray the deaths as lawful engagements through planted items and fabricated reports. The Office of the Special Investigator acknowledged the case will rely heavily on witness recollection from events up to two decades ago, with limited forensic evidence available. Roberts-Smith denies the allegations, with his defence expected to challenge the credibility of witnesses who received immunity in exchange for their evidence.
>>24512339 Ben Roberts-Smith prosecution for alleged war crimes complex, legal expert says - The prosecution of former Special Air Service corporal Ben Roberts-Smith will test Australia’s war crimes legal framework, with experts warning the case is unprecedented and highly complex. Roberts-Smith faces five charges of war crime murder over alleged killings of unarmed Afghan detainees between 2009 and 2012, which he denies. Australian National University international law professor Donald Rothwell said Australia is obligated to prosecute its own citizens under laws aligned with the International Criminal Court, making this one of the first modern cases of its kind in decades. He said the trial will rely heavily on witness testimony due to limited access to crime scenes and evidence, with each charge requiring extensive proof. Rothwell also cautioned the earlier defamation case used a lower standard, with criminal proceedings requiring proof “beyond reasonable doubt”.
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d0bc64 No.24599683
#45 - Part 58
Afghanistan War Crimes Allegations - Ben Roberts-Smith Murder Trial - Part 7
>>24512378 The Ben Roberts-Smith photograph Corrective Services tried to stop - (Video) Corrective Services NSW is reviewing the handling of Ben Roberts-Smith’s release from Silverwater prison after officers escorted the accused war crimes suspect out a back exit in a coordinated effort to avoid media scrutiny. Roberts-Smith, charged with five counts of war crime murder, was driven away in a convoy after being granted bail, with officers blocking roads and attempting to prevent photographers capturing images. Footage shows an officer pushing a camera and shouting “you can’t take pictures” as media pursued the vehicle along public roads. Authorities said the measures followed a risk assessment due to “high levels of public interest”, aimed at ensuring safety for the inmate and public. Corrections Minister Anoulack Chanthivong said any breaches of protocol would be addressed, as Roberts-Smith remains subject to strict bail conditions.
>>24515570 Accused war criminal Ben Roberts-Smith ‘categorically’ denies allegations - (Video) Former Special Air Service corporal Ben Roberts-Smith has issued his first public statement since being granted bail, saying he “categorically” denies war crimes allegations and will fight to clear his name. Speaking after his release from custody, Roberts-Smith criticised what he called a “deliberately sensational arrest” at Sydney Airport and pleaded for privacy for his family, particularly his children. He faces charges over the alleged murders of unarmed Afghan detainees, with prosecutors claiming some victims were handcuffed and that evidence was staged to portray killings as lawful. Court documents also reveal testimony from soldiers granted immunity who allege they acted on his orders. Roberts-Smith said he acted within the rules of engagement and remains “extremely proud” of his service, as the case moves toward a complex and lengthy trial.
>>24515576 Ben Roberts-Smith makes first public comments since war crime charges - (Video) Former Special Air Service corporal Ben Roberts-Smith has issued his first public comments since being charged with five counts of war crime murder, saying he “categorically” denies the allegations and will fight to clear his name. Speaking from the Gold Coast after his release on bail, Roberts-Smith said he and his family had faced a decade-long “campaign” against him and described his arrest as a “deliberate, sensational” and “unnecessary spectacle”. He said he acted within his training and the rules of engagement in Afghanistan and was “extremely proud” of his service and those he served with. Roberts-Smith, who did not take questions, remains subject to strict bail conditions including regular police reporting, as he awaits a lengthy legal process over allegations he unlawfully killed unarmed Afghan civilians.
>>24515579 Ben Roberts-Smith issues first statement after his release from Sydney jail on bail - (Video) Former Special Air Service corporal Ben Roberts-Smith has publicly denied war crimes allegations, vowing to use a criminal trial to clear his name after being released on bail. Speaking on the Gold Coast, the Victoria Cross recipient described his arrest as a “sensational” and “unnecessary spectacle” and said he had been the target of a decade-long “campaign” against him. He faces five charges of war crime murder over alleged killings of unarmed Afghan nationals between 2009 and 2012, which he denies, saying he acted within the “rules of engagement”. Roberts-Smith thanked his family and supporters, while refusing to take questions. A review is underway into his prison release after officers attempted to shield him from media, as he remains subject to strict bail conditions ahead of further court proceedings.
>>24515597 Ben Roberts-Smith’s lawyers consider making a bid to stop his war crimes trial - Lawyers for former Special Air Service corporal Ben Roberts-Smith are considering a bid to permanently halt his war crimes prosecution, arguing extensive pre-trial publicity could prevent a fair trial. Roberts-Smith, who faces five counts of war crime murder over alleged killings in Afghanistan, has denied the allegations and described his arrest as a “deliberate, sensational” and “unnecessary spectacle”. His legal team is examining a permanent stay application, which would end proceedings entirely, citing the “extraordinary” level of media attention surrounding the case. Similar applications in high-profile cases have previously failed, though courts have delayed trials to address fairness concerns. Roberts-Smith remains on strict bail conditions and said he would “never give up” as the case, expected to take years, progresses toward potential trial.
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d0bc64 No.24599684
#45 - Part 59
Afghanistan War Crimes Allegations - Ben Roberts-Smith Murder Trial - Part 8
>>24531139 Ben Roberts-Smith had vacated his rental and booked an international flight. Then the police arrived - Ben Roberts-Smith had vacated his Brisbane apartment, sought overseas relocation advice and booked international flights before his arrest on war crime charges, court documents show. The former SAS soldier had arranged travel to Spain via Singapore, with departure scheduled days after Australian Federal Police detained him on April 7 following a five-year investigation into alleged unlawful killings of Afghan detainees. Prosecutors argued he posed a flight risk, citing his plans to relocate abroad, past findings of witness interference during defamation proceedings, and allegations of evidence destruction. His legal team said he had long cooperated with authorities and was entitled to continue his life. He was granted bail under strict conditions, including surrendering his passport, reporting regularly to police, and avoiding contact with prosecution witnesses.
>>24531150 Ben Roberts-Smith ‘never planned’ to flee overseas - Ben Roberts-Smith’s partner Sarah Matulin has told a court the former SAS soldier never intended to flee Australia despite making plans to live and work overseas before his arrest on war crime charges. Affidavits released from his bail hearing show the couple explored business opportunities in Thailand, Myanmar and Spain, with visa processes underway, but maintained he would return if charged. His lawyer had also offered that he be arrested by arrangement if authorities indicated charges were imminent. Roberts-Smith said he had travelled internationally dozens of times while under investigation and always returned. Prosecutors allege he murdered or ordered the killing of unarmed Afghan detainees between 2009 and 2012 and staged evidence. He denies the allegations and remains on bail with strict conditions.
>>24533704 Ben Roberts-Smith vows to take part in Anzac Day commemorations - (Video) Ben Roberts-Smith has said he will attend Anzac Day commemorations despite facing war crime charges, describing the occasion as “sacred” and encouraging others to participate. The Victoria Cross recipient plans to appear at events in Queensland, with support from fellow VC holder Keith Payne, who said he would be “very, very bloody surprised” if Roberts-Smith was not welcome among veterans. The planned appearance comes as the former SAS soldier remains on bail over allegations of murdering Afghan detainees, which he denies. Some supporters have organised separate rallies, while veterans’ organisations said attendance at public commemorations remains open to all. Roberts-Smith said he was “extremely proud” of his service and maintained he acted within the “rules of engagement” during deployments in Afghanistan.
>>24536322 Ben Roberts-Smith attends Anzac Day event in Queensland - Ben Roberts-Smith has attended an Anzac Day ceremony on the Gold Coast while on bail over war crime charges, saying he “never thought about not coming” to the commemorations. Wearing his medals, the former SAS soldier said the day should focus on Australians who served and the sacrifices made by military families. Supporters gathered to shake his hand and take photographs following the Currumbin service, while a banner reading “we support BRS” was displayed overlooking the ceremony. Former Australian War Memorial director Brendan Nelson described Roberts-Smith as “a national hero” and defended his attendance, while RSL Australia said all veterans were entitled to participate in commemorations. Roberts-Smith denies allegations relating to the murder of Afghan detainees during deployments between 2009 and 2012.
>>24536347 Roberts-Smith attends Anzac Day dawn service on the Gold Coast - Ben Roberts-Smith was surrounded by supporters after attending an Anzac Day dawn service at Currumbin on the Gold Coast while on bail over war crime charges he denies. The former SAS soldier, wearing military medals and accompanied by partner Sarah Matulin, attended the beachside service alongside veterans, serving personnel and members of the public. Following the ceremony, supporters thanked him for his service, with one telling him to “keep fighting, mate”. Roberts-Smith described the public response as “overwhelming” and said Anzac Day was about commemorating Australians who served and the sacrifices endured by military families. RSL Australia said veterans were entitled to attend commemorations, while organisers of a separate Melbourne rally backing Roberts-Smith were reportedly not associated with him or his family.
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d0bc64 No.24599685
#45 - Part 60
Afghanistan War Crimes Allegations - Ben Roberts-Smith Murder Trial - Part 9
>>24536418 ‘Today is bigger than me’: Ben Roberts-Smith on attending Anzac Day service - (Video) Ben Roberts-Smith has attended Anzac Day commemorations on the Gold Coast, saying the occasion was “bigger than me” as he joined thousands at the Currumbin dawn service while facing war crime charges he denies. Wearing his military medals, including the Victoria Cross, the former SAS soldier said it was important to honour Australians who had served and sacrificed for the country. Supporters and veterans gathered around Roberts-Smith following the ceremony, while former defence minister Joel Fitzgibbon said his presence would “provide a boost” to morale. Fellow Victoria Cross recipient Keith Payne has also publicly supported his attendance at commemorations. Roberts-Smith remains on bail over allegations relating to the deaths of Afghan detainees during deployments between 2009 and 2012 and has not yet entered a plea.
>>24544644 Far-right group supporting Ben Roberts-Smith marches through Melbourne amid heavy police presence - A far-right rally supporting Ben Roberts-Smith marched through central Melbourne under heavy police supervision, with officers separating demonstrators from anti-Nazi protesters nearby. About 200 people attended the protest outside Parliament House, where a banner describing the Victoria Cross recipient as a “Warrior Not Criminal” was displayed. Some participants wore masks while marching through the CBD as anti-Nazi protesters shouted “Nazi scum off our streets”. One rally attendee was briefly detained after a confrontation outside the Windsor Hotel before being released. Organisers acknowledged turnout was lower than hoped and urged supporters not to be discouraged. The rally followed Roberts-Smith’s appearance at Anzac Day commemorations on the Gold Coast while on bail over war crime charges relating to alleged killings in Afghanistan, which he denies.
>>24555875 Ben Roberts-Smith’s girlfriend calls potential criminal witness and MP Andrew Hastie a ‘traitor’ - Ben Roberts-Smith’s partner Sarah Matulin has apologised after calling Liberal MP and former SAS officer Andrew Hastie a “traitor” on social media over Anzac Day weekend. Matulin posted the comment beneath an Instagram photo of Hastie attending commemorations with his children before later deleting it. Speaking through Roberts-Smith’s lawyer Karen Espiner, she said making the comment publicly was a “mistake” and had occurred without Roberts-Smith’s knowledge. Hastie, a potential witness in Roberts-Smith’s upcoming war crimes trial, responded that people should “reflect carefully on the seriousness of these matters before commenting online”. Roberts-Smith faces five war crime murder charges relating to Afghanistan deployments, which he denies. Legal experts said contact with potential witnesses could, in some contexts, raise concerns about intimidation or interference, though there was no suggestion Matulin acted illegally.
>>24573048 One Nation makes accused war criminal Ben Roberts-Smith its poster boy for Farrer by-election - One Nation has made its public support for accused war criminal Ben Roberts-Smith a central feature of its campaign in the Farrer by-election, displaying posters featuring the former SAS soldier at pre-polling booths in Albury ahead of Saturday’s vote. The corflutes show Mr Roberts-Smith in SAS uniform alongside the slogan “He fought for us. One Nation stands with him”. Party leader Pauline Hanson, who authorised the material, said her backing reflected One Nation’s support for military veterans and criticised the treatment of Mr Roberts-Smith and his family. A party spokesman said the campaign targeted an electorate with a large veteran population. Mr Roberts-Smith, who was arrested last month on five murder charges linked to alleged war crimes, has denied wrongdoing and remains on bail.
>>24578278 One Nation defends campaign corflutes supporting Ben Roberts-Smith in Farrer by-election campaign - One Nation has defended campaign signage supporting Ben Roberts-Smith displayed outside pre-polling booths in the Farrer by-election, despite concerns about politicising military service and affecting ongoing legal proceedings. The corflutes feature the former SAS soldier alongside the slogan “He fought for us. One Nation stands with him” and were authorised by party leader Pauline Hanson. A One Nation spokesman said the campaign reflected the party’s support for military veterans. Mr Roberts-Smith faces five murder charges linked to alleged war crimes in Afghanistan, which he denies. Defence advised political parties to avoid using images of current or former Australian Defence Force personnel in campaign material. Legal experts also warned public commentary on matters before the courts could raise sub judice concerns and affect future proceedings.
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d0bc64 No.24599686
#45 - Part 61
The Transgender Agenda - Australia and Worldwide - Part 1
>>24359367 TGA in the dark on use of puberty blocker drugs - Australia’s Therapeutic Goods Administration (TGA) has warned the federal government it lacks reliable data on how widely puberty blocker drugs are prescribed to gender-distressed minors because the medicines are used “off-label” and are not approved for treating gender dysphoria. Documents obtained under Freedom of Information show the regulator cannot assess the “risk-benefit profile” or calculate adverse-event rates for this use because it does not receive prescribing data for off-label indications. Health Minister Mark Butler sought urgent advice after the United Kingdom imposed an indefinite ban on routine puberty blocker prescriptions outside a proposed clinical trial following the Cass review. The TGA said it has not evaluated the drugs for gender-affirming care and relies largely on voluntary reporting of adverse events. Without comprehensive usage data, officials say regulators have limited oversight of safety, efficacy and prescribing patterns in Australian children’s hospitals treating gender-distressed minors.
>>24359409 At least 2300 children given puberty blockers as states refuse to release data - At least 2387 Australian children have been prescribed puberty blockers for gender dysphoria since 2014, according to an analysis compiled from Freedom of Information data and limited figures released by some jurisdictions, as most states and territories refuse to disclose prescribing numbers. Health departments in six jurisdictions declined to provide data, leaving regulators and researchers without a comprehensive national picture of the treatment’s scale. The lack of official statistics has drawn criticism from experts who say such gaps “would not be countenanced for any other medical condition” and prevent scrutiny of long-term outcomes. Queensland reported 491 prescriptions between 2020 and October 2025 before banning new public-sector prescriptions, while Western Australia confirmed 20 new patients in 2025. Federal Health Minister Mark Butler has commissioned the National Health and Medical Research Council to review Australia’s guidelines for treating gender-distressed youth.
>>24578951 Australian Psychological Society slammed over gender care backflip - The Australian Psychological Society has faced criticism after releasing a revised position statement supporting gender-affirming care for children and teenagers while removing references to the United Kingdom’s Cass review and other studies questioning aspects of the treatment model. Retired clinical psychologist Sandra Pertot said the changes abandoned a more evidence-based and exploratory approach contained in an earlier draft, describing the outcome as a “betrayal” of members and taskforce contributors. Emeritus professor Dianna Kenny called the final statement “a disgraceful denial of evidence-based medicine”, while child psychiatrist Jillian Spencer labelled it “dangerously out-of-date”. APS president Kelly Gough defended the document, saying it was guided by “current evidence and ethical practice” and reflected a commitment to “respectful, person-centred, evidence-informed support” for people experiencing gender distress.
>>24578972 Australian psychologists treating gender distress may be working from a flawed evidence base - Claire Lehmann, editor of online magazine Quillette, has criticised the Australian Psychological Society’s revised position statement on gender-affirming care, arguing the organisation removed references to major international reviews and evidence questioning aspects of medical transition treatment for children and adolescents experiencing gender dysphoria. Lehmann states the United Kingdom’s Cass Review found evidence supporting puberty blockers and cross-sex hormones for minors was limited and methodologically weak, contributing to Britain restricting some treatments and closing the Tavistock gender clinic. Lehmann argues the APS deleted references to the review and softened earlier draft cautions about long-term outcomes, suicide risk and the importance of exploratory assessment before affirmation. Lehmann also cites clinicians including Sandra Pertot, who warned psychologists could face professional or legal risks for using exploratory therapy approaches rather than immediate affirmation under conversion therapy laws operating in several Australian states. Lehmann argues the APS should revisit its guidance and more fully incorporate emerging international evidence into future policy development.
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d0bc64 No.24599687
#45 - Part 62
The Transgender Agenda - Australia and Worldwide - Part 2
>>24578982 Trans doctor Beth Upton at centre of UK dispute now working in Australia - Transgender doctor Beth Upton, who was involved in a high-profile United Kingdom legal dispute over female workplace spaces, has been registered by Australia’s medical regulator as “female” and is now working in two NSW hospitals under provisional supervision. Dr Upton previously gave evidence in a UK tribunal involving Scottish nurse Sandie Peggie, who challenged being required to share female hospital changing facilities with Dr Upton, who is biologically male and transitioned in 2022. The case prompted wider debate about sex-based rights, gender identity and workplace policies in healthcare settings. The Australian Health Practitioner Regulation Agency confirmed Dr Upton holds provisional registration in Australia. Advocacy groups criticised the decision, while Equality Australia defended the registration and said healthcare systems routinely manage patient preferences while respecting qualified practitioners.
>>24579005 Peak medical regulator ‘compromised’ by partnership with trans lobby group - Australia’s medical regulator AHPRA has faced criticism over its partnership with advocacy organisation ACON, with doctors and psychiatrists claiming the relationship undermines confidence in the regulator’s neutrality on gender medicine. Documents obtained under freedom of information laws show AHPRA incorporated guidance from ACON-linked inclusion programs into broader regulatory and workplace strategies. Critics, including child psychiatrist Jillian Spencer and a coalition of health professionals, argued the regulator appeared aligned with gender-affirming treatment approaches while investigating clinicians who publicly questioned aspects of gender medicine for minors. AHPRA rejected suggestions its engagement with community organisations compromised impartiality, saying regulatory decisions were based on evidence and public safety considerations. ACON also denied exerting influence beyond workplace inclusion programs and defended its role in supporting equity and inclusion initiatives.
>>24579031 AHPRA accused of ‘ideological capture’ amid calls to sever links with ACON - Australia’s medical regulator AHPRA has faced renewed criticism over its relationship with advocacy organisation ACON, with women’s rights groups and parents of gender-distressed adolescents claiming the regulator has become ideologically compromised on gender medicine issues. Critics argued AHPRA’s ties to ACON and related inclusion programs undermined confidence in its impartiality, particularly following regulatory action against psychiatrists Andrew Amos and Jillian Spencer, who publicly questioned aspects of gender-affirming treatment for minors. Women’s Forum Australia chief executive Rachael Wong accused AHPRA of suppressing clinical debate and prioritising ideology over evidence-based medicine. Parents of Adolescents with Gender Distress also criticised the regulator’s handling of complaints and called for greater transparency. AHPRA has maintained its regulatory decisions are guided by public safety obligations and existing legal confidentiality requirements.
>>24579051 ‘Take my treatment as a warning’: Psychiatrist Andrew Amos suspended for opposing youth gender treatments - Queensland psychiatrist Andrew Amos has been suspended by the Royal Australian and New Zealand College of Psychiatrists following earlier restrictions imposed by AHPRA and the Medical Board of Australia over his public comments opposing gender-affirming treatment for children and teenagers. Dr Amos said the college suspended his membership without warning or procedural fairness, while the college stated the move was an interim governance measure linked to restrictions on his medical practice. The National Association of Practising Psychiatrists criticised the decision and questioned whether regulators were suppressing dissenting views on gender medicine. NAPP president Philip Morris also raised concerns about AHPRA’s relationship with advocacy organisation ACON, arguing the regulator risked appearing aligned with one side of a contested medical debate regarding puberty blockers and cross-sex hormones for minors.
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d0bc64 No.24599688
#45 - Part 63
The Transgender Agenda - Australia and Worldwide - Part 3
>>24579064 APS board member accused of ‘intimidation’ after questioning mother of detransitioned son - The Australian Psychological Society is reviewing correspondence from board member Andrew Chua after a mother accused him of “intimidation” during an exchange about the society’s position on gender-affirming care. The mother, whose adult son medically transitioned before later deciding he was not transgender, had written to the APS expressing concern about the organisation’s revised position statement on gender dysphoria treatment. In emails responding on behalf of the board, Mr Chua questioned whether the son had received “appropriate support”, prompting the mother to allege the exchange implied parents critical of the affirmation model could be viewed as harmful to their children. APS president Kelly Gough said the correspondence would be reviewed and stressed the organisation did not regard parents raising concerns as abusive or dangerous.
>>24579069 Parents plead for change to ‘highly irresponsible’ gender claims - Parents of Adolescents with Gender Distress has urged the Australian Human Rights Commission to revise information materials supporting gender-affirming care, arguing the resources contain “misleading and inaccurate claims” about treatment for children experiencing gender dysphoria. The group, representing more than 50 families, said the materials relied too heavily on advocacy organisations while failing to adequately address disputed evidence, possible long-term health risks and experiences of detransitioned young people. The concerns follow the commission’s Equal Identities report endorsing gender-affirming care for minors, including puberty blockers. PAGD said some children later improved after therapy addressing issues such as trauma, anxiety or autism without medical transition. The Australian Human Rights Commission defended the explainers, saying they were designed to outline legal protections and human rights obligations rather than provide clinical advice.
>>24579072 ANALYSIS: Witch hunt against Queensland psychiatrists critical of gender-affirming care rolls on as Australian institutions go all in on free speech crackdown - "In Australia today, women and doctors are being investigated, suspended and threatened with the loss of their livelihoods for daring to state what most Australians know to be true: there are only two sexes, sex is immutable, men cannot become women, and no child is ever born in the wrong body. These are not fringe views. They are the most basic facts of human biology. Yet gender ideology has flipped reality on its head. Speak these truths out loud and you risk being branded a bigot, dragged through the courts or stripped of your career. Look at two respected Queensland psychiatrists right now. Dr Jillian Spencer, a senior child and adolescent psychiatrist with more than two decades’ experience, was stood down from Queensland Children’s Hospital for raising legitimate clinical concerns about the rush to put children on puberty blockers. She now faces suspension, a termination notice under Supreme Court review, and an ongoing AHPRA investigation, simply for sharing a news article quoting her own views. Dr Andrew Amos has been suspended by the Royal Australian and New Zealand College of Psychiatrists and gagged by the Medical Board. His offence? Publicly opposing the telling of dangerous lies to distressed children and the sterilising medical pathway that sometimes follows, as well as complaints made about his social media posts on the subject … With the treatment of Drs Spencer and Amos, the medical establishment is ignoring overwhelming public sentiment and basic human instinct: we all know what a woman is and all doctors once knew too. Other countries have already woken up. Systematic reviews in the UK, Sweden, Finland and Norway found the evidence for puberty blockers and cross-sex hormones in minors dangerously weak. Yet here in Australia the institutions double down. We cannot allow our hospitals, regulators, courts and human rights bodies to be captured by an ideology that treats biological reality as bigotry. Australian citizens must not be punished for acknowledging basic reality. At the heart of this is free speech. If we cannot openly defend the most fundamental truths about human biology without fear of professional destruction, we are no longer a free society. No one is born in the wrong body. No one should lose their job, their licence or their reputation for saying so. Enough. Australia must stop punishing those who simply tell the truth." - Sall Grover, women’s rights campaigner and founder/CEO of the women-only social app Giggle - Sky News Australia
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d0bc64 No.24599689
#45 - Part 64
AUKUS Security Pact and Nuclear Submarine Program - Part 1
>>24424631 US Admiral stares down AUKUS doubters over WA’s submarine deadline - The United States Navy’s operations chief has reaffirmed confidence that Virginia-class submarines will be delivered to Australia by 2032 under AUKUS, despite concerns about production capacity. Admiral Daryl Caudle said shipbuilding rates should exceed two submarines per year by the 2030s, addressing scepticism that current output of about 1.3 annually is insufficient. He said improvements in workforce, advanced manufacturing and modularisation would support a “transformational improvement” in output. Caudle visited HMAS Stirling to assess upgrades supporting a rotating US and UK submarine presence from next year. He said US personnel would have a minimal population impact but provide a “significant” economic boost, while describing Australia as a “great partner” in shared security and naval operations.
>>24424666 US Naval Operations chief Admiral Daryl Caudle confirms WA will house first nuclear-powered sub by 2034 - Western Australia is set to host its first sovereign Virginia-class nuclear-powered submarine by 2034 under AUKUS, with at least two to be based at HMAS Stirling. US Naval Operations Chief Admiral Daryl Caudle said the United States would “stick to the agreement” to rotate four submarines through Submarine Rotational Force-West from next year, forming part of a broader five-submarine rotational presence. He said construction at HMAS Stirling was progressing steadily, with facilities for maintenance, housing and operations in place and “not behind” schedule. The Australian Government’s $8 billion upgrade is expected to support thousands of jobs. Caudle said US shipbuilding rates should exceed two submarines annually by 2030, reinforcing confidence in delivery timelines and long-term defence cooperation.
>>24526266 US commander says Australia is ready for AUKUS subs, warns of 'increasingly aggressive' China - (Video) The United States Indo-Pacific commander has warned Congress that China’s rapidly expanding military poses a growing threat, while praising Australia’s readiness to host AUKUS submarines. Admiral Samuel Paparo said the US needed to “supercharge” shipbuilding and weapons production, citing shortages of submarines, destroyers and amphibious vessels as demand outpaces supply. He said upgrades to HMAS Stirling in Western Australia were progressing well and could host submarines “today”, but acknowledged concerns about delays in US submarine production that may affect delivery of Virginia-class vessels to Australia in the 2030s. Paparo also highlighted China’s increasing military output and global ambitions, warning its actions could reshape regional security dynamics, as US resources are stretched by commitments including the ongoing war in the Middle East.
>>24544719 US Navy awards first AUKUS submarine contract using Australian funds but experts warn of production strain - The US Navy has awarded its first AUKUS-related submarine contract using Australian funding, marking a significant milestone in the trilateral security partnership while raising fresh concerns about strain on American submarine production capacity. Electric Boat, the United States’ primary nuclear submarine designer and builder, received a $US196 million contract funded through Australia’s $US3 billion contribution to the US submarine industrial base. US congressman Joe Courtney described the agreement as evidence AUKUS was “tangibly moving forward”, while Admiral Samuel Paparo said preparations for a rotational submarine force in Western Australia remained on schedule. However, congressional analysts warned America’s submarine production lines were already under pressure and may struggle to meet both domestic naval requirements and commitments to deliver Virginia-class submarines to Australia under AUKUS.
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d0bc64 No.24599690
#45 - Part 65
AUKUS Security Pact and Nuclear Submarine Program - Part 2
>>24548231 King Charles plays the AUKUS card to mend fractured alliance with Donald Trump - King Charles III is expected to use a historic address to the US Congress to emphasise the AUKUS security partnership and broader defence ties as part of efforts to reinforce relations between Britain and the United States during a period of tension involving President Donald Trump and Prime Minister Keir Starmer. Buckingham Palace has indicated the King will frame the relationship around “reconciliation and renewal”, highlighting NATO and AUKUS as examples of enduring strategic co-operation despite disagreements over Iran, migration and defence policy. The four-day state visit includes meetings with Trump at the White House, a formal state dinner and a congressional address marking the 250th anniversary of American independence. King Charles is also expected to reference the recent security incident at the White House Correspondents’ Dinner during his speech.
>>24555948 King Charles hails AUKUS pact as he calls on US to defend alliances - (Video) King Charles III has used a rare address to the US Congress to highlight the AUKUS submarine pact as a symbol of enduring strategic ties between Britain, the United States and Australia amid rising global instability. Describing AUKUS as “the most ambitious submarine program in history”, the monarch said the partnership strengthened “shared resilience” and reinforced long-term security for allied nations. The speech, delivered during celebrations marking 250 years since American independence, also stressed the importance of NATO, support for Ukraine and continued co-operation between Western allies. King Charles referenced the recent assassination attempt against President Donald Trump, declaring such violence would “never succeed”. Trump welcomed the King and Queen Camilla at the White House with full ceremonial honours and praised the “special relationship” between Britain and America.
>>24556044 Inside Trump’s state dinner for the King, where Australia took centre stage - (Video) Australia and the AUKUS partnership featured prominently during King Charles III’s state dinner at the White House, with the monarch presenting President Donald Trump a historic submarine bell linked to wartime operations in Australia. Charles described the bell from HMS Trump, a British-built World War II submarine that later served with an Australian-based squadron, as an “AUKUS predecessor” symbolising shared military history and future co-operation. The King also elevated AUKUS alongside NATO as a key alliance helping Western nations confront an “increasingly complex and contested world”. Trump warmly received the gesture during the intimate East Room dinner attended by senior US officials, billionaires and business leaders, including Australian packaging executive Anthony Pratt. The evening also featured speeches, humour and renewed emphasis on the “special relationship” between Britain and America.
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d0bc64 No.24599693
#45 - Part 66
AUKUS Security Pact and Nuclear Submarine Program - Part 3
>>24556451 UK parliament's AUKUS inquiry report questions if Britain can keep submarine promises - A British parliamentary inquiry has raised concerns about whether the United Kingdom can deliver nuclear-powered submarines promised under the AUKUS pact on schedule, warning delays or funding shortfalls could undermine the trilateral partnership with Australia and the United States. The House of Commons Defence Committee said the SSN-AUKUS program would require sustained financial commitment across multiple governments and described signs of weakness in the investment pipeline as “deeply concerning”. The report also highlighted risks linked to low submarine production rates in the United States, where Virginia-class boats are intended for sale to Australia from the early 2030s. While broadly supportive of AUKUS, the inquiry noted criticism that geopolitical changes and Donald Trump’s “America First” approach had complicated the agreement’s long-term reliability and strategic assumptions.
>>24556469 New Defence chief Meghan Quinn faces AUKUS test amid UK doubts - Meghan Quinn has been appointed Australia’s new Defence Department secretary, becoming the first woman to hold the role as the government confronts mounting concerns over delays and risks to the AUKUS submarine program. Quinn, previously the architect of Labor’s Future Made in Australia agenda, will oversee major reforms ordered by Defence Minister Richard Marles to address procurement failures and cultural problems within the department. Her appointment coincided with a British parliamentary inquiry warning “shortcomings and failings” could threaten AUKUS delivery timelines, particularly around UK shipyard upgrades and investment. Opposition defence spokesman James Paterson urged Labor to consider purchasing US B-21 stealth bombers as insurance against potential capability gaps. Prime Minister Anthony Albanese insisted the submarine pact remained “full steam ahead” despite the British concerns.
>>24592928 AUKUS champion to oversee top-secret defence committee - Labor senator Deborah O’Neill is expected to chair a new parliamentary defence committee established to oversee highly classified aspects of Australia’s expanding military build-up, including the AUKUS nuclear submarine program. The bipartisan committee, created through legislation passed in March, will receive access to sensitive defence and intelligence briefings usually withheld from public scrutiny. Membership has been restricted to Labor and Coalition parliamentarians, excluding the Greens and crossbench MPs because of the classified material involved. Senator O’Neill has been one of parliament’s strongest supporters of AUKUS, previously describing the nuclear submarine program as “transformational”. Liberal senator Dave Sharma is expected to become deputy chair. The committee will oversee a defence program projected to cost up to $368 billion, including Australia’s acquisition of Virginia-class and Australian-built nuclear-powered submarines.
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d0bc64 No.24599694
#45 - Part 67
Australia / China Tensions - Part 1
>>24386734 Australian expat was Chinese spy asset, jury finds - (Video) A New South Wales District Court jury has found Australian businessman Alexander Csergo guilty of reckless foreign interference after deciding he “recklessly compiled reports” for individuals he should have suspected were Chinese spies linked to China’s Ministry of State Security. Prosecutors said Csergo, approached on LinkedIn while running a business in Shanghai, produced “fake, plagiarised reports” using open-source material on mining, politics, defence and security, and falsely claimed to have interviewed figures including former Australian prime minister Kevin Rudd. The reports were handed over in person, sometimes in near-empty venues, in return for envelopes containing thousands of dollars in cash. Judge Craig Smith continued Csergo’s bail until Monday, with conditions requiring him to report to police twice a day, after prosecutors sought his immediate detention.
>>24386739 Alexander Csergo who sold reports to Chinese spies jailed after guilty verdict - (Video) Sydney businessman Alexander Csergo has been taken into custody ahead of sentencing after a judge found it was “realistically inevitable” he would receive a further jail term for reckless foreign interference. The District Court jury had earlier found Csergo guilty over reports he prepared for two people he believed were linked to China’s Ministry of State Security, with the Crown describing the case as a “very serious example” of the offence over a 16-month period. Judge Craig Smith said he did “not accept that there are exceptional circumstances”, rejecting defence arguments about Csergo’s earlier custody and strict bail conditions. Csergo, who said he supplied only open-source material, is due back in court on March 20.
>>24386745 ABF holds secret China talks as tobacco giant slams Australia’s black market failure - Australian Border Force deputy commissioner Tim Fitzgerald has held “friendly talks” in Beijing with Chinese tobacco regulators as concern grows over Australia’s illicit tobacco and vape trade. Chinese state media said Fitzgerald met officials from China’s State Tobacco Monopoly Administration, though it remains unclear whether any agreement was reached or whether the talks will affect Australia’s black market. The report says toxic Chinese-made vapes and illicit cigarette brands have flooded the country, while British American Tobacco chief corporate officer Kingsley Wheaton argued Australia is now “the blackest of the black tobacco markets in the world” and warned illicit products account for “two in every three cigarettes”. He said collapsing excise revenue and rising criminal violence showed the policy settings had “backfired spectacularly”.
>>24400095 Colonial-style arrogance: China attacks Australia, New Zealand over Iran comments - China has condemned Australia and New Zealand for “colonial-style arrogance” after the two countries issued a joint statement criticising Iran’s missile and drone attacks and raising concerns about Beijing’s conduct on issues including the South China Sea, Xinjiang, Tibet and Hong Kong. In response, China’s embassy in New Zealand accused both governments of hypocrisy, “bias, misinformation” and double standards, and said they were ignoring the “root cause” of the Middle East war while criticising China’s internal affairs. The embassy also pointed to Australia and New Zealand’s own records on indigenous and minority issues, repeated Beijing’s positions on Taiwan and maritime disputes, and urged Wellington to take a “clear-eyed view” of the situation. The exchange reflects a renewed use of sharp diplomatic language as tensions over regional security, human rights and the Iran conflict deepen.
>>24415989 Iran may be using China’s advanced satellite system, ambassador concedes - China’s ambassador to Australia, Xiao Qian, has said Iran could be using Beijing’s BeiDou satellite navigation system to target United States and Israeli military assets, while insisting China is not directly involved in the conflict. In a rare interview with 60 Minutes Australia, Xiao said the system was available on a public or commercial basis and that Beijing did not discriminate over access. He also described the killing of Iran’s supreme leader in joint United States-Israeli strikes as a violation of international law and called for an immediate halt to the war and a return to negotiations. More broadly, Xiao said China’s military actions in places including the South China Sea and Tasman Sea showed it was no longer a country that could “easily be bullied”, while warning Australia to uphold its One China policy over Taiwan.
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d0bc64 No.24599695
#45 - Part 68
Australia / China Tensions - Part 2
>>24505916 Accused military man Daniel Duggan loses fight to stay in Australia - (Video) Former United States Marine pilot Daniel Duggan will be extradited to the United States after the Federal Court rejected his bid to remain in Australia, where he faces allegations of aiding the Chinese military. Duggan, an Australian citizen and father of six, is accused of arms trafficking and money laundering linked to training activities in South Africa in 2012, which he denies. Justice James Stellios found no jurisdictional error in the extradition decision and ruled arguments around dual criminality were “inconsequential”. Duggan has been held in a maximum security prison since his 2022 arrest in New South Wales and faces up to 65 years’ imprisonment if convicted. His wife described the ordeal as “1,273 days of… terrible trauma”, saying he has spent 19 months in solitary confinement. Supporters argue he was solely an Australian citizen at the time, a claim central to their position that US jurisdiction should not apply to his alleged conduct.
>>24505926 Former US Marines pilot Dan Duggan loses bid to avoid extradition from Australia - (Video) Former United States Marine Corps pilot Daniel Duggan will be extradited to the United States after the Federal Court dismissed his bid to block the transfer over allegations he trained Chinese military pilots. Duggan, an Australian citizen, denies charges including arms export violations and money laundering linked to activities between 2009 and 2012, and faces up to 65 years’ imprisonment if convicted. Justice James Stellios ruled the court’s role was limited and rejected arguments that the offences must have equivalent Australian laws, focusing on legal eligibility for extradition rather than the underlying allegations. Supporters argue he “broke no Australian law” and warn against “US overreach”, while his legal team said the decision turned on a narrow legal point rather than the merits of the case. Duggan has 28 days to appeal, with final approval resting with the federal government.
>>24512470 US ex-Marine loses extradition appeal in China pilots case - (Video) Former US Marine pilot Daniel Duggan has lost an appeal in an Australian court against his extradition to the United States, where he faces charges of illegally training Chinese military pilots. Duggan, 57, has been in custody since his 2022 arrest in regional New South Wales after returning from China, and denies the allegations. The US claims he committed offences between 2009 and 2012, including breaching an arms embargo and money laundering linked to pilot training in South Africa. Federal Court Justice James Stellios rejected arguments that the conduct was not illegal under Australian law at the time. Duggan’s wife urged Prime Minister Anthony Albanese to intervene, while his legal team has 28 days to consider further appeal. The case has drawn attention to foreign military training links and Australia’s tightened laws in this area.
>>24512473 Ex-US Marine loses extradition appeal over Chinese pilot training allegations - (Video) Former US Marine Corps pilot Daniel Duggan has lost his appeal against extradition to the United States, where he faces allegations of illegally training Chinese military aviators more than a decade ago. Federal Court Justice James Stellios ruled there was no jurisdictional error in the 2024 decision by then attorney-general Mark Dreyfus to approve extradition. Duggan, who denies the allegations and describes them as “political posturing”, is accused of providing training in South Africa without the required licence and receiving payments and travel benefits. He has been held in maximum security custody since his 2022 arrest in New South Wales. His wife said the family was “very disappointed” and would consider further legal action, while also urging Attorney-General Michelle Rowland to intervene and reverse the extradition order.
>>24521943 Vanuatu denies China security deal as Australia monitors regional ties - Vanuatu has denied claims it is negotiating a security agreement with China, as Australia closely monitors the Pacific nation’s engagements with Beijing amid ongoing talks over a separate pact with Canberra. Officials said recent meetings, including a ministerial visit to a Hong Kong technology summit, focused on cyber security and development, with no agreements signed. Both Vanuatu and the Chinese embassy rejected suggestions of a defence arrangement, stressing cooperation centred on infrastructure and capacity building. Vanuatu also insisted discussions on the stalled Nakamal Agreement with Australia were “not at all linked to China”. The deal collapsed last year over provisions seen as limiting Beijing’s role in regional security and infrastructure, highlighting tensions as Australia seeks to maintain influence in the Pacific.
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d0bc64 No.24599697
#45 - Part 69
Australia / China Tensions - Part 3
>>24515562 Japan reportedly seals largest-ever postwar defense deal with frigate sale to Australia; move exposes Tokyo’s dangerous overconfidence, risks jeopardizing regional security: experts - "Tokyo signed a contract on Saturday with Canberra to supply the first three of a planned fleet of 11 upgraded Mogami-class frigates to the Australian Navy, the largest defense export contract in Japan's postwar history, Japan Times reported, and the was described by Reuters as "Tokyo's most consequential military sale since ending a military export ban in 2014," which signals Japan's push away from postwar pacifism and a move "to counter China." The sale deal risks intensifying an arms race in the Asia-Pacific, Chinese experts said, adding that Japan, by doing so, is misjudging the situation and being overconfident on its part in its capabilities and security environment - assuming it can expand its military role at will without jeopardizing its own security, Chinese experts said. … For Japan, the ability to export offensive weapons marks a fundamental breach of the "three principles on transfer of defense equipment and technology", enabling a major step in exporting advanced arms and moving toward becoming a major arms exporter. If such vessels are deployed near the South China Sea, they could also affect China, Song Zhongping, a Chinese military affairs expert, told the Global Times. It is actually Japan's ulterior motive to exporting weapons to China's neighbors to complicate regional security reality and indirectly counter China, Song pointed out, slamming Japan's dangerous militaristic resurgence. However, Song believes by doing so, Japan is overconfident in its capabilities of managing the situation - assuming it can expand its military role without risking domestic security. Such misplaced confidence could lead to serious strategic misjudgment, Song added. … Song said that under the umbrella of the US Asia-Pacific strategy, Japan and Australia are growing closer. However, Australia needs to recognize that if it chooses to interfere in East Asian affairs, a place far away from itself, by joining hands with Japan to counter China - it would be seen as a reckless and self-damaging move." - Zhao Yusha and Xia Wenxin, Global Times
>>24566025 Chinese-owned Landbridge launches international legal action over forced sale of Port of Darwin - Chinese-owned Landbridge has launched international legal action against Australia over the federal government's plan to force the sale of Darwin Port, arguing the move is “discriminatory” and breaches obligations under the China-Australia Free Trade Agreement (ChAFTA). Prime Minister Anthony Albanese pledged during the election to return the strategically sensitive port to Australian ownership on national security grounds, with the government negotiating for an Australian buyer while considering compulsory acquisition powers. Landbridge owner Ye Cheng has now sought arbitration through the World Bank's International Centre for Settlement of Investor Disputes, marking the first such case brought against Australia at the tribunal. Transport Minister Catherine King said the government was “disappointed” by the action but intended to continue negotiations. Coalition defence spokesman James Paterson said Canberra should not “cave in” to Landbridge’s.
>>24566044 Chinese firm launches legal bid to retain Darwin Port - Chinese-owned Landbridge has launched a World Bank legal challenge against the Albanese government's plan to return Darwin Port to Australian ownership, arguing the move breaches the China-Australia Free Trade Agreement (ChAFTA). Prime Minister Anthony Albanese pledged during the election to end the company’s 99-year lease over the strategically located port, but the government has not detailed how it would reclaim the asset. Infrastructure Minister Catherine King said Canberra was “disappointed” by the action and would defend the claim while continuing “good-faith discussions” with Landbridge. The company said it acquired the port through an “open and competitive process” and noted previous Australian government reviews found “no national security concerns”. The Trump administration has continued pressing Australia over the port’s Chinese ownership because of its proximity to shared military facilities in Darwin.
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d0bc64 No.24599699
#45 - Part 70
Australia / China Tensions - Part 4
>>24566278 Chinese firm reportedly sues Australian govt over Port of Darwin; case tests Canberra’s commitment to international investment obligations: analyst - "Landbridge, a Chinese-owned company that owns Darwin Port, has launched international legal action to try and stop the Australian government from acquiring the port on so-called "national security" grounds. In a statement posted on its website on Friday, the company said that it considers the Commonwealth's proposed approach to return the Port of Darwin to Australian hands to be discriminatory and inconsistent with Australia's obligations under the China-Australia Free Trade Agreement. The company said it acquired its interest in the port "through a fair, open and competitive process in full compliance with all applicable Australian laws and regulatory approvals." Multiple Australian Government reviews have confirmed there are no national security concerns … Chen Hong, director of the Australian Studies Center of East China Normal University, told the Global Times on Saturday that Chinese enterprises' proactive legal action signals that this is more than a commercial dispute over port operating rights - it fundamentally tests Australia's commitment to contractual commitments, the rule of law, and international investment obligations. "If Australia forcibly reclaims the port without a solid legal basis, it would send a highly negative message: legitimate contracts could be stigmatized as security threats and overturned simply due to political needs. Against this backdrop, the filing of the lawsuit elevates the matter from Australia's domestic political discourse to the framework of international law and investment protection," Chen said … If Australia truly values the stability and improvement of bilateral relations, it should avoid turning the Darwin Port issue into a new political flashpoint, especially amid the warming of China-Australia ties and the recovery of economic cooperation, Chen said. Chen noted that Australia must stop intervening in normal business deals under the pretext of national security and grant Chinese enterprises the same transparent, predictable treatment as other foreign investors. "Otherwise, Australia will not only bear legal and economic costs through arbitration but also damage its international reputation as an open and reliable investment destination."" - Global Times
>>24573024 Takaichi pushes ‘free and open Indo-Pacific’ with Australia to contain China, but effect will be limited: expert - "Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi started her visit to Australia on Sunday, and during a meeting with Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese on Monday, she promoted a “free and open Indo-Pacific” concept and pushed for deeper energy and critical minerals cooperation between the two countries. This marked a similar approach she had taken during her visit to Vietnam from Friday to Sunday. These moves have been criticized by Chinese experts as a calculated attempt to contain China's influence and build an exclusive regional bloc. Takaichi said she hopes Japan and Australia will play a leading role in regional stability under the updated "free and open Indo-Pacific" vision during her meeting with Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese on Monday in Canberra, NHK reported Monday … Takaichi has also called for strengthening frameworks such as the Quad, and described the relationship between Japan and Australia as “quasi-allies” … When asked to comment on Takaichi's scheduled proposal of a new version of the so-called "free and open Indo-Pacific" during her visit to Vietnam, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson Lin Jian said on Wednesday that state-to-state interactions should not target or harm the interests of third parties. Under the pretext of freedom and openness, Japan is in essence stoking bloc confrontation and forming exclusive cliques. Such practices run counter to the shared aspiration of regional countries and the international community for peace, development and cooperation, and are unpopular, Lin said … He further noted that countries such as Australia are unlikely to align with Japan in confronting China … Penny Wong’s recent visit and remarks clearly show that Canberra fully recognizes China as one of its most important, stable, and structurally complementary economic partners, Chen Hong, director of the Australian Studies Center at East China Normal University, told the Global Times. Chen warned that the real danger lies not in normal Japan-Australia cooperation, but in militarization of their bilateral ties. For Australia, he stressed, the wisest choice is not to follow Japan’s push for military normalization or join the US-led camp confrontation, but to safeguard regional stability and preserve its own strategic autonomy." - Hu Yuwei and Wang Zixuan, Global Times
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d0bc64 No.24599700
#45 - Part 71
Australia / China Tensions - Part 5
>>24578419 Takaichi’s ‘kneeling’ tribute in Australian war memorial sparks controversy; a political calculation aimed at pleasing West, but offensive to Asian neighbors: Chinese expert - "Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi, a prominent right-wing figure who has repeatedly offered tributes at the notorious Yasukuni Shrine which enshrines Class-A war criminals directly responsible for wars of aggression during the WWII, surprised many during her recent visit to Australia, during which she knelt on both knees in front of the Tomb of the Unknown Australian Soldier to lay flowers at the Australian War Memorial in Canberra. Her such act has sparked controversy online, with many criticizing it a hypocritical political performance aiming to appease the West and showing the Japanese leader's white supremacy complex. A Chinese expert commented that Takaichi's behavior is full of political calculation and is offensive to Japan's Asian neighboring countries … Despite the efforts of Japanese authorities and mainstream press to frame the event as a simple floral offering while downplaying the act of kneeling, the move indeed sparked controversy on the internet … Xiang Haoyu, a distinguished research fellow at the China Institute of International Studies, told the Global Times on Wednesday that Takaichi's "kneeling" is a world apart from former German Chancellor Willy Brandt's act of kneeling on both knees in front of the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising Memorial. "The latter represented genuine reflection and respect. In contrast, Takaichi's behavior is full of political calculation and has offended Japan's Asian neighboring countries." "This is merely a political show designed to please Western allies. It is not sincere repentance at all. If Japan truly wants to reflect and show genuine remorse, it should first properly answer and make amends to its Asian neighboring countries," Xiang noted. "The voices of supporting Takaichi to visit Yasukuni Shrine precisely reflects the spread of erroneous historical views within Japan, where right and wrong are blurred," the Chinese expert warned." - Deng Xiaoci, Global Times
>>24592868 Why Japan’s PM ‘kneeling’ in Australia should be alarming - (Video) '"Takaichi’s double standards are deafening. In Australia, she honored anti-fascist fighters. In Malaysia, she mourned invading Japanese troops. She eagerly courts the West, yet dodges history and provokes her Asian neighbors. To her, history isn’t for reflecting, it’s a bargaining chip. Her “reconciliation” in Australia? Just cover for Japan’s military ambitions." - Global Times
>>24592869 Japan urged to stop hypocritical self-glorification: China’s MND slams Takaichi’s ‘a free and open Indo-Pacific’ claim during visits to Australia, Vietnam - "A spokesperson for the Chinese Ministry of National Defense (MND) on Saturday urged Japanese authorities to stop their hypocritical self-glorification and rein in their dangerous ambition of military expansion and war preparation, in responding to claims made by Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi during visits to Australia and Vietnam. It is reported that Takaichi recently visited Australia and Vietnam to strengthen security cooperation with the two countries. During her visits, she touted a so-called updated vision of "a free and open Indo-Pacific", and clamored that Japan's post-war constitution, drafted during US military occupation, should be periodically updated to meet the demands of the times. Asked to comment on this, Senior Colonel Jiang Bin, the MND spokesperson, said that under the pretexts of the so-called "free and open Indo-Pacific" and "security cooperation", governing authorities in Japan are instigating bloc confrontation and building "small circles." This undermines the strategic security and interests of other countries, and serves as an excuse for Japan to break free from the restrictions on its military development, which we firmly oppose, Jiang said. Post-war Japanese governments did promise to uphold the pacifist constitution and pursue the path of a peaceful nation. Later on, they started to pay lip service and take few actions to back up such promise. The Takaichi administration, however, openly pushes for amending Japan's constitution. This shows that the Japanese right-wing forces are shedding their pretense, and shifting from covert military buildup to overt war preparation, making Japan's "neo-militarism" a growing and more prominent threat to regional peace, the MND spokesperson said." - Global Times
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d0bc64 No.24599701
#45 - Part 72
Australia / China Tensions - Part 6
>>24592895 Former Chinese defence ministers Wei Fenghe and Li Shangfu receive suspended death sentences - Former Chinese defence ministers Wei Fenghe and Li Shangfu have received suspended death sentences after being convicted on corruption charges by China’s military court. Wei was found guilty of accepting bribes, while Li was convicted of both accepting and offering bribes. Under China’s legal system, the two-year reprieves will likely be commuted to life imprisonment without parole if the pair demonstrate good behaviour. Both men were stripped of political rights for life and had all personal property confiscated. The punishments represent one of the harshest outcomes of President Xi Jinping’s long-running anti-corruption campaign targeting the military and defence sector. Wei and Li were both former members of the powerful Central Military Commission and disappeared from public view after being removed from office amid widening investigations into corruption within China’s armed forces and defence procurement system.
>>24592922 Solomon Islands PM toppled in no-confidence vote - Solomon Islands Prime Minister Jeremiah Manele has lost power after parliament passed a no-confidence motion by 26 votes to 22, ending months of political instability in the Pacific nation. The vote followed cabinet resignations and the withdrawal of coalition partners, which left Mr Manele’s government weakened since March. Ahead of the motion, Mr Manele criticised the courts after judges ordered parliament to convene, describing the ruling as “judicial overreach”. Former foreign minister Peter Shanel Agovaka, considered a frontrunner to replace him, accused the government of weak leadership and inadequate transparency over spending linked to the Pacific Games and regional summits. Analysts said the leadership change would be closely watched internationally because the Solomon Islands has strengthened ties with Beijing in recent years while Australia has sought to counter growing Chinese security influence in the Pacific.
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d0bc64 No.24599702
#45 - Part 73
Child Sexual Abuse, Pedophilia, Human Trafficking and Satanism Investigations - Part 1
>>24360139 ‘Some of the worst’:Dozens charged as police bust online paedophile ring- Thirty-five men across Victoria and New South Wales have been charged with more than 1000 offences after police infiltrated and dismantled an encrypted online network allegedly sharing extreme child sexual abuse material. The year-long undercover investigation, known as Operation Jac Beau, involved Australian Federal Police and Victoria Police officers posing as members of the group to identify suspects who believed encryption would conceal their activities. Authorities examined more than 300 hours of video footage and about 65,000 unique images during the investigation and executed more than 30 search warrants across Melbourne, regional Victoria and parts of NSW. Twenty-six arrests were made in Victoria and nine in NSW. Police said the material shared in the network depicted severe sexual abuse, torture and murder of infants and young children and bestiality, and was believed to have been produced overseas. Investigators have added the material to the International Child Sexual Exploitation database to assist global efforts to identify victims and offenders.
>>24360152 More than two dozen men charged with more than 1000 child abuse material offences - (Video) Twenty-six men in Victoria have been arrested and charged with more than 1000 offences after police dismantled an encrypted online group used to share large volumes of extreme child abuse material. Investigators said the network distributed more than 65,000 images and more than 300 hours of video depicting the sexual abuse, torture and murder of infants and young children, as well as bestiality. The two-year investigation by the Australian Federal Police and Victoria Police targeted suspects who allegedly used encrypted messaging platforms to exchange material and discuss plans to sexually abuse children. Australian Federal Police Detective Superintendent Bernard Geason said the material uncovered was “among the worst of the worst” and reflected the “sad reality” that some offenders exploit children for “their own perverse desires”. Victoria Police Detective Superintendent Tim McKinney said investigators faced the distressing task of reviewing hundreds of hours of video material, along with written conversations where participants expressed their desire to find children and infants in real life. Detective Acting Inspector Scott Amjah said the “volume and depravity” of the material uncovered “will stay with all of us” and warned the public would be “absolutely horrified by the content of the material that is circulated online these days”.
>>24363966 Australian footballer Barry Cable on trial for alleged sexual abuse of girl in 1960s - Former Australian football Hall of Famer Barry Cable has gone on trial in Western Australia accused of sexually abusing a girl aged under 13 at his Perth home in the late 1960s. The woman, now in her sixties, told the District Court the alleged abuse occurred when she was between eight and 11 years old after she was taken from an orphanage to stay with Cable and his family. Prosecutor Kim Jennings said the case would reveal a “dark side” behind Cable’s celebrated football career and told the court three additional women would give evidence about alleged offending. Cable, 82, has pleaded not guilty to seven charges. Defence lawyer Tom Percy said the allegations were “completely denied” and argued records and witness evidence would show the alleged incidents could not have occurred.
>>24371560 Wife of Australian footballer Barry Cable takes stand in his child sex abuse trial - The wife of former AFL player Barry Cable has told a Perth court the alleged victim in his child sexual abuse trial never stayed at their home, rejecting key elements of the prosecution case. Cable, 82, is accused of abusing a girl under 13 in the late 1960s after she was allegedly taken from an orphanage to the family home. The complainant has testified the abuse occurred over multiple visits while Mrs Cable was asleep, but Helen Cable said she had never heard of the orphanage and “can’t imagine it ever happened”. Under cross-examination, she denied documents suggesting the girl had stayed with them. A relative of the alleged victim told the court she was informed of the abuse decades earlier. Cable denies the allegations and did not take the stand to testify in his own defence.
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d0bc64 No.24599703
#45 - Part 74
Child Sexual Abuse, Pedophilia, Human Trafficking and Satanism Investigations - Part 2
>>24371570 ‘He’d laugh’: Disgraced football great Barry Cable accused of abusing girls in spa - A Perth court has heard new allegations that former AFL player Barry Cable abused multiple young girls, including claims he exposed himself and committed indecent acts in a backyard spa. Cable, 82, is on trial over historical child sexual abuse charges relating to a girl aged about eight in the late 1960s, with prosecutors alleging repeated abuse at his family home. Two additional witnesses told the court Cable fondled them and exposed himself during spa incidents in the 1980s, with one alleging attempted penetration. Both said the behaviour occurred in the presence of other children and that complaints were dismissed. The defence has rejected the allegations and accused witnesses of fabrication and financial motivation. Cable denies all charges as the trial continues.
>>24379483 Abuse survivor Beth Heinrich wins public apology from Anglican Church for decades of failure - Abuse survivor Beth Heinrich will receive a formal public apology from the Anglican Church after decades of campaigning over its handling of her abuse by former bishop Donald Shearman and subsequent treatment by senior figures. Brisbane Archbishop Jeremy Greaves will deliver the apology at St John’s Cathedral, acknowledging institutional failures, including those of former archbishop Peter Hollingworth, who suggested Heinrich was partly at fault. Heinrich, 86, said she hoped the moment would “be an inspiration to others” to act on their own abuse and seek accountability. Greaves, who is also a survivor, said victims often carry “shame and guilt that belongs to the perpetrators” and that an apology could help Heinrich move “one more step on her journey of healing”. The case highlights longstanding criticism of the church’s handling of abuse complaints and the enduring impact on survivors.
>>24391153 Daniel’s Law: Two charged via Queensland’s public sex offender register - (Video) Two people have become the first in Queensland to be charged after community reports generated through the state’s public sex offender register, with Acting Police Commissioner Denzil Clark saying nine offenders had so far been identified as having access to children. Clark said two were facing charges for allegedly failing to properly report to police, while investigators were examining whether the other seven had breached their obligations. The register, launched on December 31 as Daniel’s Law, has been accessed more than 205,000 times in its first 10 weeks and lets users check a public list of offenders whose whereabouts are unknown, conduct locality searches for reportable offenders in their area, and make parent or guardian inquiries about whether a person with unsupervised contact with a child is a current reportable offender. Premier David Crisafulli said the scheme was “shining a spotlight on monsters” and would not be watered down.
>>24391161 Parents flock to Daniel’s Law website in overwhelming response - Queensland’s public child sex offender registry has been accessed more than 205,000 times since launching in December, with the Daniel’s Law website attracting a new visitor about every 30 seconds as parents and carers seek information about convicted offenders. The scheme gives users access to three levels of checks: a public list of reportable offenders whose whereabouts are unknown, locality searches that allow residents to view photographs of certain offenders living in their area, and parent or guardian applications to find out whether a specific person with unsupervised contact with a child is a reportable offender. Premier David Crisafulli said the early results showed the reforms were giving “parents and police the power to act”, while Daniel Morcombe’s father Bruce Morcombe said the law was “making a difference” by helping protect Queensland children. - Daniel’s Law website: https://www.danielslaw.qld.gov.au/daniels-law/
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d0bc64 No.24599704
#45 - Part 75
Child Sexual Abuse, Pedophilia, Human Trafficking and Satanism Investigations - Part 3
>>24411700 Zev Serebryanski avoids further jail over child sexual abuse of Manny Waks in a Melbourne synagogue almost four decades ago - (Video) Zev Serebryanski has avoided further jail after being sentenced in the County Court of Victoria over the child sexual abuse of Manny Waks at the Yeshivah Centre in St Kilda East in the late 1980s. The 62-year-old received a 22-month sentence, but 19 months were wholly suspended for three years, while three months served in a New York prison before extradition to Melbourne were counted as time served, allowing him to walk free. A jury last year found him guilty of three counts of indecently assaulting a person under 16 and one count of sexually penetrating a child aged between 10 and 16. Judge John Kelly said the abuse caused profound harm and noted “damning admissions” and a partial apology captured in covert documentary footage. Before the hearing, Waks said the sentence made “little difference” from his perspective, adding: “My battle is over. I got him convicted for his heinous crimes against me,” and: “My ongoing battle has never been about revenge or retribution - rather, it’s about justice, accountability and prevention.”
>>24411738 Velvel Serebryanski, convicted of sexually abusing Manny Waks, walks free from court - (Video) Velvel Serebryanski has walked free from the Victorian County Court after receiving a 22-month sentence, with 19 months suspended and three months already served on remand in the United States counted as time served. He was also placed on a three-year good behaviour bond and remains a registered sex offender. Manny Waks, who watched the hearing from Israel by videolink, described the outcome as a significant milestone, saying: “I feel vindicated and that justice has prevailed.” He added that although Serebryanski had “walked away today”, “for me it’s not about punishing him and making him miserable for the rest of his life”. Waks said the case “hasn’t been about revenge and retribution, it’s about justice, accountability and prevention”. Judge John Kelly said the offending was profound and involved an exploitation of trust inside “one of the most sacred sites in the Jewish community”, while rejecting Serebryanski’s attempt to minimise responsibility.
>>24416011 Anglican church apologises to sexual abuse victim Beth Heinrich - Anglican Archbishop of Brisbane Jeremy Greaves has publicly apologised to Beth Heinrich, saying the church failed her both when she was abused as a teenager and when she later sought help. Speaking at St John’s Cathedral, Greaves said senior leaders in the Brisbane diocese, including former archbishop Peter Hollingworth, had compounded her suffering by failing to respond with “compassion, and justice, and accountability”. Heinrich, now 86, was abused in the 1950s by Reverend Donald Shearman while she was a minor in his care at an Anglican-run boarding house in Forbes, New South Wales. In 1995 she asked Hollingworth to have Shearman removed from the clergy, but he refused despite overseeing mediation in which the priest admitted the abuse. After the apology, Heinrich said Archbishop Greaves was “the first that appears to believe me, that I haven’t been treated properly by previous archbishops”, and added: “When they deny you something, it’s like you’re being abused again,” while expressing hope other survivors would seek justice too.
>>24416043 Anglican Church issues formal apology to 86-year-old child sex abuse survivor Beth Heinrich - Anglican Archbishop of Brisbane Jeremy Greaves has formally apologised to Beth Heinrich at St John’s Cathedral, acknowledging that church leaders, including former archbishop Peter Hollingworth, failed her after years of abuse and mistreatment. Greaves said Heinrich had been abused by Donald Shearman in a context of “power and trust” and that when she later found the courage to speak, “her voice was dismissed”. He told her that “what happened to you was not your fault” and apologised for the Brisbane diocese failing to act with integrity and care. Heinrich, 86, said the apology marked a turning point after decades of being ignored, declaring: “This is the end for me. I’m making an example and I want to encourage others.” She urged other survivors to keep fighting, saying they should not “get dissuaded by knock-backs” because “you’ve just got to keep knocking at the door”, and said Greaves was the first church figure “that appears to believe me”.
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d0bc64 No.24599706
#45 - Part 76
Child Sexual Abuse, Pedophilia, Human Trafficking and Satanism Investigations - Part 4
>>24502437 Childcare predator Ashley Griffith in bid to reduce life sentence - Convicted child sex offender Ashley Griffith will seek to reduce his life sentence at a Queensland Court of Appeal hearing on May 28 after pleading guilty to 307 offences, including 28 counts of rape, committed over nearly two decades in childcare centres across Queensland and New South Wales. Griffith, described by the sentencing judge as “depraved” and presenting a high risk of reoffending, was given a non-parole period of 27 years, with his legal team arguing the sentence is excessive and should be reduced to a shorter fixed term. The case involved at least 65 victims, some as young as one, with evidence he filmed nearly all assaults and mocked children during the abuse. Separate proceedings remain pending in New South Wales over a further 180 alleged offences involving 23 identified victims, with extradition expected after the appeal process concludes. Families have raised concerns about delays, saying the process has been retraumatising.
>>24512455 ‘Worst nightmare’: 137 abuse charges hit Sydney childcare worker - (Video) A Sydney childcare worker has been charged with 137 offences spanning more than a decade, as federal police prepare to contact families of suspected victims following an extensive investigation into alleged child abuse material. The man faces 68 counts of producing child abuse material, 29 counts of filming a private act without consent, 29 counts of using a child under 14 to make abuse material, including 11 aggravated counts, seven counts of sexually touching a child under 10, and other related offences, with some carrying penalties of up to 20 years’ imprisonment. Authorities analysed 2.4 million files after being alerted by the US-based National Center for Missing and Exploited Children, with police warning many victims may be unaware they were targeted and the number of victims remains undisclosed. Detective Superintendent Luke Needham described the case as “a parent’s worst nightmare” and said specialist teams were preparing to support affected families, as further charges remain possible and investigations near completion.
Former footballer Barry Cable found not guilty of sexually abusing child in 1960s - Former Australian Rules footballer Barry Cable has been found not guilty of child sexual abuse charges dating back to the 1960s, following a judge-only trial in the Western Australian District Court. Judge Michael Bowden said he generally accepted the complainant’s account and considered it “more probable than not” she was telling the truth, but found there was insufficient evidence to prove guilt beyond reasonable doubt. The ruling cited the absence of independent corroboration and the impact of decades-long delay, which limited Cable’s ability to mount a defence, with incomplete records and potential witnesses now deceased. The case centred on allegations the girl stayed at the Cable home, which was disputed, including evidence the property location did not match. Cable’s wife told the court the complainant had never stayed with them. Other women gave evidence about separate allegations, though not part of the charges, as the court weighed conflicting accounts.
>>24518296 Ex-Aussie rules football legend Barry Cable cleared in historical child sex abuse case - (Video) Former Australian Rules footballer Barry Cable has been acquitted of historical child sexual abuse charges after a judge-alone trial in the Perth District Court. Judge Michael Bowden found Cable not guilty of multiple offences, including indecent dealing and unlawful carnal knowledge, despite accepting the complainant’s account as “more probable than not” true. He ruled the evidence did not meet the criminal standard of proof beyond reasonable doubt, citing the absence of corroboration and the impact of a 60-year delay, which created “significant forensic disadvantage” for the defence. The case involved allegations the girl was abused at Cable’s home, which he denied. His family welcomed the outcome, describing the case as distressing, while the court emphasised the limitations imposed by missing records and deceased witnesses.
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d0bc64 No.24599712
#45 - Part 77
Child Sexual Abuse, Pedophilia, Human Trafficking and Satanism Investigations - Part 5
>>24518298 Barry Cable found not guilty in historical child sex abuse trial - (Video) Former Australian Rules footballer Barry Cable has been acquitted of historical child sexual abuse charges dating back to the 1960s following a judge-only trial in the Western Australian District Court. Cable, 82, had pleaded not guilty to five counts of indecent dealing and two counts of unlawful carnal knowledge involving a girl under 13, with prosecutors alleging the abuse occurred at his family home. The judge found the allegations were not proven beyond reasonable doubt and cleared him of all charges. Cable’s family said they were “pleased” and “not surprised” by the outcome, noting he had always maintained his innocence. The case follows a separate civil ruling in 2023 that found Cable liable for abuse of another girl, resulting in damages and the loss of honours, including removal from the Australian Football Hall of Fame and the stripping of his legend status.
>>24556764 Hundreds of child abuse files found on devices belonging to police killer Dezi Freeman - (Video) Police allegedly discovered hundreds of child abuse files on devices belonging to Dezi Freeman after the sovereign citizen shot dead two Victorian police officers during a raid on his property in August last year. Officers had attended Freeman’s makeshift home near Porepunkah to execute a search warrant linked to a child abuse investigation when he opened fire, killing constables Neal Thompson and Vadim de Waart-Hottart before fleeing into bushland. Freeman remained on the run for 216 days before being shot dead by police in March after an armed standoff in north-east Victoria. Authorities are also investigating alleged historical sexual offences connected to Freeman. Detectives are now focusing on identifying people who may have helped him evade capture while living as a fugitive across regional Victoria.
>>24556810 Landon Germanotta-Mills: Bail win for alleged leader of global satanic child abuse ring - (Video) Alleged child abuse network figure Landon Germanotta-Mills has been granted Supreme Court bail despite prosecutors warning the accusations against him involved some of the “most extreme” material investigators had encountered. Police allege the 27-year-old played a leading role in an international child abuse ring involving satanic imagery and material relating to babies and young children. Germanotta-Mills, who had been held on remand since November, faces multiple charges involving the alleged possession, transmission and access of child abuse material. Justice Belinda Rigg acknowledged the prosecution case appeared strong and carried a “real prospect” of imprisonment if convicted, but ruled strict bail conditions could manage community risks. He will live under home detention with his mother in regional New South Wales while awaiting further court proceedings alongside several co-accused men.
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d0bc64 No.24599713
#45 - Part 78
Child Sexual Abuse, Pedophilia, Human Trafficking and Satanism Investigations - Part 6
>>24576260 Jasper Jones author Craig Silvey pleads guilty to distributing child exploitation material - West Australian author Craig Silvey has pleaded guilty to distributing and possessing child exploitation material after appearing in Fremantle Magistrates Court, while two other charges against him were dropped. The 43-year-old, best known for the novel Jasper Jones, was arrested in January following allegations he engaged online with other suspected child exploitation offenders over several days. Earlier court hearings were told Silvey allegedly distributed child exploitation material and expressed a sexual interest in children during online conversations. One possession charge and a charge of producing child exploitation material were withdrawn on Tuesday. Silvey remains on bail under strict conditions, including reporting to police three times a week and being banned from child-related work. His case now proceeds to the District Court for sentencing following the guilty pleas.
>>24576312 Australian author Craig Silvey's books permanently pulled from WA public schools - Western Australia has permanently removed books by author Craig Silvey from the state’s public school curriculum after he pleaded guilty to possessing and distributing child exploitation material. Education Minister Sabine Winton said there was “absolutely no place” in schools for works by someone who admitted to “serious crimes”, confirming an earlier temporary suspension would become permanent. Premier Roger Cook backed the decision as “appropriate”. Silvey, best known for Jasper Jones, pleaded guilty this week after being charged following a police raid on his Fremantle home in January. His publisher Allen & Unwin said it would review steps to end its relationship with the author, while several libraries and bookstores have already removed his books from shelves.
>>24576326 Landon Germanotta-Mills: Encrypted chats reveal horrific allegations against ‘satanic paedophile’ - Sydney man Landon Germanotta-Mills has been accused of participating in an online child abuse network uncovered during a NSW Police investigation into encrypted file-sharing platforms allegedly used to distribute exploitation material. Court documents allege the 27-year-old possessed and transmitted thousands of abuse images involving children and animals, while engaging in online conversations with other suspected offenders. Police arrested Germanotta-Mills at his Waterloo apartment in November under Strikeforce Constantine after tracing accounts linked to a New Zealand-based website. Detectives alleged he attempted to explain the material by claiming he was acting as an “investigative journalist” building a case. NSW Supreme Court Justice Belinda Rigg granted him bail last month under strict conditions including home detention, daily police reporting and bans on internet-enabled devices. Germanotta-Mills has not entered pleas and will return to court later this year.
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d0bc64 No.24599719
PREVIOUSLY COLLECTED NOTABLES
Q Research AUSTRALIA #45 ———————————— https://www.fullchan.net/?c2631b9b6d802200#4a6JMWxoCb54hgfuQ2ExY8nyZisHpfpdUMjP1sxdQR5S
Q Research AUSTRALIA #44 ———————————— https://www.fullchan.net/?151988ee2c81a85b#D8iHxzhuqsDBk2QUw3icaVyKHq5UyvThwMXw2gN62hW8
Q Research AUSTRALIA #43 ———————————— https://www.fullchan.net/?8982fe5e24ea92f5#E94rVvo5d5x8eNKXFcviR8JR2ARg1rbvPU1yFXCvK5Rt
Q Research AUSTRALIA #42 ———————————— https://www.fullchan.net/?019818d661be4b9c#E6VgQa6cjDvcaNNyJkyNpAj4B76xp4WkiWLoJCpusBLD
Q Research AUSTRALIA #41 ———————————— https://www.fullchan.net/?21d970f62e5ccb01#nkAKS22kjJQwFepGu4WuottDKgxjbTN3S1kCiym7FFJ
NOTABLES ARCHIVE
Q Research AUSTRALIA #31 - #40 ——————–——– https://www.fullchan.net/?5a659d98ae03160a#BhFCvrfE7JDouz3QHXg6pQ1Ur8J8awS9u5METKcDAjLR
Q Research AUSTRALIA #21 - #30 ——————–——– https://www.fullchan.net/?4363b527973f8b50#79PDB3KkDf1Lrzpdp9FRAUeNU2ipR6w7482cJUTSHyZA
Q Research AUSTRALIA #11 - #20 ——————–——– https://www.fullchan.net/?be74180e50d86066#DEjTcJMB31fjsFGc8SEa92BZvsdEoBV6gYrf4dEyagah
Q Research AUSTRALIA #01 - #10 ——————–——– https://www.fullchan.net/?ec18eb68d2a4f858#9wdQ8iSQZtzQsCTkLdaeZtAVwiw5usWiYQmoqqCCFCum
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d0bc64 No.24599721
THREAD ARCHIVES
Q Research AUSTRALIA #45 ————————————–——– https://archive.vn/DaBq4
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d0bc64 No.24599723
CURRENT DOUGH
https://www.fullchan.net/?e3a48d9b95862b03#9AgNEv68U5DFTmnfV4piEuhrrHynbPFoHMdemfM6hx6D
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d0bc64 No.24599739
>>24589344 (pb)
Pauline Hanson calls on Angus Taylor to back One Nation if she wins more seats at the election
ROSIE LEWIS - May 11, 2026
1/2
An emboldened Pauline Hanson has extended her hand to Angus Taylor and Nationals leader Matt Canavan to create a conservative plan to get rid of Anthony Albanese, as she demanded the Coalition guarantee support for a One Nation-led government if her party wins more seats than it does at the next election.
On a high after voters for the first time elected a One Nation MP to the House of Representatives at Saturday’s Farrer by-election, taking the party’s lower-house representation to two, the One Nation leader declared the Coalition had to realise “I’m not the enemy” as she looked to pick up more electorates than the Liberals and Nationals in one term.
The Coalition holds 41 seats in the House of Representatives.
“If they get the numbers and they require our numbers to give them government, then I will give them supply and confidence,” Senator Hanson told The Australian. “I don’t want a ministerial position because that means they will be able to shut me down, dictate to me, and I have to pass bad legislation, support them on it. I’m not going to do that.
“But I also want to know: if we get more members than what they do, and we require their numbers (to form government), will they give me the same deal? We don’t know what the future holds. The people are angry. The people have had enough.”
As Liberals face the likelihood of making more deals with the populist party to beat Labor, the Prime Minister predicted it would be unlikely the Coalition could form government without One Nation but didn’t believe Senator Hanson’s cut-through would extend into metropolitan seats.
Senator Hanson agreed with Mr Albanese’s “bold” assertion that the Coalition now needed One Nation.
Pressed on whether she would sit down with the Opposition Leader and Senator Canavan to map out a possible pathway to government at the next election, due in 2028, she said: “We can do that closer to the election. There’s not going to be an election on for another two years and hopefully we’ll be able to work together with the Coalition government in Victoria and in NSW up to the (federal) election.
“I was just disgusted with the dirty fight that the Nats and Libs brought against One Nation in the seat of Farrer instead of working with us to stop the teal from winning the seat. It tells me that they’re very concerned about the rising support of One Nation. They’ve got to realise I’m not the enemy. If they are really conservatives, are there for the right reasons to get good government for the people and oust the Labor Party, they should be working with me, not against me.”
Senator Hanson denied One Nation was at its peak, describing the Farrer win as “breaking the ceiling”. It had not solidified her desire to switch from the Senate and run in the lower house at the next election, saying that move was still under consideration.
Senator Canavan said he had no interest in creating a formal coalition with One Nation and wanted to win government without Senator Hanson’s support, adamant that no more Nationals MPs would follow Barnaby Joyce and defect to the minor party.
The Liberals gained just 12.38 per cent of the first preference vote in the Farrer by-election, representing a swing of 31 per cent against the party, compared with 39.46 per cent for One Nation’s David Farley and 28.39 per cent for independent candidate Michelle Milthorpe, who was backed by Climate 200.
The Nationals picked up 9.72 per cent of the first preference vote, the first time the party had been able to field a candidate since losing the seat to the Liberals in 2001.
“One Nation finished first (in Farrer) but the problem has been traditionally … the One Nation vote doesn’t always come back to our side of politics, that people’s preferences go all of which ways,” Senator Canavan said.
“There has to be a very clear message to the Australian people that if you want to change the government, you’ve got to put the Labor Party last. If that’s all you do, you’re going to get change. Everything else you can do, I don’t care. You can put the Greens one and they’ll get knocked out anyway.”
(continued)
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d0bc64 No.24599740
>>24599739
2/2
Mr Albanese accused the Liberal and Nationals parties of “legitimising” One Nation by swapping preferences with Senator Hanson and adopting similar policies, saying it was a “big mistake” that led to thousands of Farrer voters switching their allegiance to Senator Hanson.
Farrer had been held by the Coalition since it was created in 1949.
“What is very clear now is that the chances of the Liberal Party and National Party being a part of a government just by themselves don’t look pretty, don’t look likely, to say the least,” Mr Albanese said on 4CA Cairns radio. “The fact they’re talking openly about effectively a three-party government down the track, I think people know how unstable a Liberal, National, One Nation government would be.”
The dysfunction within the Coalition since the May 2025 election – with the Nationals splitting from the Liberals twice and former Liberal leader Sussan Ley, who represented Farrer, being ousted – also had harmed the conservative parties, Mr Albanese said. But he didn’t expect One Nation’s appeal to go beyond regional electorates where the party had traditionally done best.
He believed Labor and moderate Liberal voters wouldn’t want to see One Nation become part of a government and acknowledged the protest vote on Saturday of people “under financial pressure who feel like the system isn’t working for them”.
“That’s a message for all political parties in the system,” Mr Albanese told the ABC’s RN Breakfast program.
Deputy Liberal leader Jane Hume denied her party’s policies were imitating and copying those of One Nation as she dismissed a future coalition with Senator Hanson’s party as a “massive hypothetical”.
She said the two break-ups of the Coalition since the election had resulted in a “a pretty devastating breach of trust for the Australian people”, while noting Mr Taylor had been leader of the Liberals for only 10 weeks and Senator Canavan leader of the Nationals for a shorter time
“They (voters) expect a united and strong Coalition now. That’s what is in place now, but we paid the price for that breach of trust at the Farrer by-election,” Senator Hume told ABC News Breakfast.
“We always knew that it was going to be a tough by-election with the retiring of the local member who’d been there for quarter of a century. It’s a really long time to be in parliament and to represent your community.
“The community were feeling disillusioned. We’ve heard the message loud and clear. We need to rebuild trust. We’ve lost trust in the last few years, and we need to rebuild that now, and that’s exactly what Angus Taylor and I intend to do.”
One Nation MP Barnaby Joyce, who will be joined by Mr Farley in the House of Representatives, said the right-wing minor party would not have an open door to Coalition MPs looking to jump ship, claiming the Liberals’ loss in Farrer was “almost a signal that things might be over”.
“Just because you jump doesn’t mean we catch you. It’s not an open door that anybody who wishes just walks into One Nation,” Mr Joyce said.
“The Liberal Party really do have to do some soul searching after the weekend because that was catastrophic. That is almost, that’s almost a signal that things might be over.”
Mr Joyce said the result could not be brushed off by the major political parties, claiming the limit of One Nation’s reach was up to the Australian people. “It’s as far as the Australian people want it to go, I suspect. As things evolve over time, the base broadens,” he said.
“Talking to people last night in the western suburbs of Sydney, they’re quite at home with the idea of One Nation being a dominant force in western Sydney.”
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation/anthony-albanese-says-liberals-nationals-legitimised-one-nation-affected-the-farrer-byelection-vote/news-story/fab6d15634650d0fd78f66c8cd7a40f7
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d0bc64 No.24599808
YouTube embed. Click thumbnail to play.
Australian soldier killed after two parachutes collide mid-air in training incident at Jervis Bay
Jack Nivison and Ria Pandey - May 12, 2026
1/2
An Australian special forces soldier has been killed in a “mid-air collision” during a parachute training exercise at a Defence Force base in coastal NSW.
Warrant Officer Lachlan Muddle, 50, was killed on Monday night when he collided mid-air with a parachute instructor as his paratrooper regiment was involved in routine training at the Jervis Bay Airfield.
Addressing media on Tuesday, Major General Garth Gould said the men “collided several hundred feet above the ground as they were manoeuvring towards the drop zone”.
“After the collision, both soldiers fell from height. One soldier, a sergeant from the Australian Defence Force parachute school, survived the fall with minor injuries,” General Gould said.
“A second soldier, Warrant Officer Lachlan Muddle, received fatal injuries as a result of the fall.
“Warrant Officer Muddle was provided immediate first aid on the scene by Australian Defence Force medics who were later joined by NSW Ambulance who arrived on the scene very quickly.
“Both paratroopers were highly skilled. Between the two of them, they had several thousand jumps to their credit.”
When asked by reporters if he believed the ADF parachute training safety protocols were up to scratch, General Gould said he had “a high degree of confidence”.
“I do believe they are up to scratch and fit for purpose. I’ve got a high degree in confidence in our training system,” he said.
“You’re right to bring up the tragic accident that involved Lance Corporal Jack Fitzgibbon about two years ago. That matter involved a single paratrooper. It was investigated through a number of lines of inquiry. Some of those inquiries have concluded and provided recommendations, others are close to concluding.
“I am very confident in the safety system as a whole.”
General Gould also added that all parachute exercises across the Defence Force had been halted pending an internal investigation into Warrant Officer Muddle’s death.
Prime Minister Anthony Albanese paid tribute to Warrant Officer Muddle, stating “our hearts go out to his Army family and the broader Defence community”.
“This tragic accident is a stark reminder that there are no easy days for those who defend our nation,” the Prime Minister said in a statement.
“We are in the debt of every Australian who serves and puts themselves on the line for all of us.
“May Warrant Officer Class Two Muddle live on in every heart he touched.”
(continued)
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d0bc64 No.24599810
>>24599808
2/2
Opposition Leader Angus Taylor described Warrant Officer Muddle as an “honourable man” whose loss would reverberate in the lives of those closest to him.
“His family has lost a husband. Friends have lost a mate, and the Special Air Service regiment has lost a brother in arms,” Mr Taylor said.
“We acknowledge their loss and their grief as we mourn our nation’s loss of such a fine Australian.”
The House of Representatives observed a moment of silence in honour of Warrant Officer Muddle.
Warrant Officer Muddle joined the Army in 1994, going on to serve in the elite Special Air Service Regiment in 2007.
Defence Minister Richard Marles said it was important to “let the investigation play out”.
“It does matter that we continue to train, and the skills of parachuting are fundamental to a range of occupations within the Defence Force, but for this moment we have paused parachuting within the ADF to understand as best we can what has happened here,” Mr Marles said.
“It does appear as though the parachutes have become tangled … but the exact rate of descent, whether they landed together, are details which need to be investigated.
Mr Marles said it was important to make sure any investigation into how Warrant Officer Muddle’s death unfolded was “as thorough as possible”.
NSW Minister for Veterans affairs David Harris said he extended his “deepest condolences” to Warrant Officer Muddle’s family, loved ones and ADF colleagues.
“The loss of any service member is profoundly distressing, and this incident will be deeply felt across the Defence and veteran communities. ADF personnel undertake demanding and often hazardous training in preparation for service to our nation. That commitment reflects extraordinary professionalism, courage and dedication” Mr Harris said.
“While training is essential to operational readiness, any loss of life during these activities is devastating and warrants careful reflection.”
The death comes more than two years after former federal defence minister Joel Fitzgibbon’s son Jack was killed in a parachute incident at the Richmond RAAF base in Sydney’s northwest.
https://www.news.com.au/technology/innovation/military/an-australian-soldier-killed-in-training-accident-at-jervis-bay-nsw-adf/news-story/eaab16512d923022cf18feffd93d0040
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XIo6_Sa1pR0
https://x.com/AlboMP/status/2054045002930737627
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d0bc64 No.24599829
>>24599808
Defence Minister hails ‘one of Australia’s finest’ Lachlan Muddle after tragic collision
MOHAMMAD ALFARES and PAIGE FRYER - May 12, 2026
1/2
One of Australia’s “finest” and “deeply experienced” SAS troopers has died after a catastrophic mid-air collision during a military drill to prepare soldiers to parachute in darkness.
Warrant Officer Second Class Lachlan Muddle, 50, an expert sniper and veteran special forces operator who served on five deployments including Afghanistan, died after colliding mid-air with another elite paratrooper during a night-time training exercise at Jervis Bay Airfield on the NSW south coast on Monday evening.
The incident that claimed Mr Muddle’s life took place during an advanced military freefall training conducted in low-light conditions using night-vision goggles, of which officers had completed four out of the planned six weeks of daring activities.
The second paratrooper involved was a sergeant from the ADF Parachute School, also an experienced military freefall parachutist. He survived the fall with minor injuries.
Between the two of them, the veterans had several thousand jumps to their credit.
The impact of the crash sent Mr Muddle spiralling towards the ground and caused him to crash into thick bushland and to suffer injuries that, despite the best efforts of his fellow soldier to perform CPR, proved fatal.
Defence Minister Richard Marles said the force had “lost one of its finest”, adding that Mr Muddle was an “expert sniper” and experienced special forces operator whose death would be felt across the SAS community.
Addressing the media on Tuesday, Army Special Operations Commander Major General Garth Gould said despite both soldiers effectively deploying their canopies, the mid-air collision caused both men to fall from height.
Warrant Officer Muddle was provided immediate first aid on the scene by ADF medics, who were quickly joined by NSW Ambulance.
The second soldier, a sergeant from the ADF Parachute School survived, sustained only minor injuries.
Major General Gould said the accident occurred about 5.40pm, roughly four weeks into a six-week advanced military freefall training block.
Several investigations into the incident are now under way with Major General Gould saying he believes training safety protocols “are up to scratch”.
“After successfully opening their parachutes, what we know about the incident is that both paratroopers collided several hundred feet above the ground whilst they were manoeuvring towards the drop zone,” he said.
“After the collision, both soldiers fell from height.”
Major General Gould said the training environment was deliberately challenging, taking place in low-light conditions as part of a high-level capability course.
He said both men were among the most experienced parachutists in the Australian Defence Force.
When asked by reporters if he believed the ADF parachute training safety protocols were up to scratch, he said he had “a high degree of confidence”.
He said Warrant Officer Muddle was “highly regarded” within their community.
He joined the Army in 1994 before moving into Special Operations Command in 2007, where he spent most of his career serving with the SAS Regiment.
“He was a skilled professional, and he’ll be remembered for his sense of humour and his genuine and deep commitment to serving the nation, serving an army, and serving in the Special Air Service regiment,” Major General Gould told reporters.
“In a tight-knit community like ours, his loss has been very deeply and immediately felt.”
Major General Gould announced the ADF immediately paused all personnel parachuting operations pending an investigation.
“Our priority at the moment is supporting Warrant Officer Muddle’s family, and also providing support to the ADF members involved in the incident last night, as well as supporting the initial investigative matters,” he said.
(continued)
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d0bc64 No.24599832
YouTube embed. Click thumbnail to play.
>>24599829
2/2
The incident is the second parachuting fatality the ADF has suffered in more than two years.
In March 2024, 33-year-old Lance Corporal Jack Fitzgibbon, who served with the elite 2nd Commando Regiment, died from injuries sustained during a routine parachute drill at the Richmond RAAF air base in Sydney’s northwest.
Lance Corporal Fitzgibbon was the son of former federal Defence Minister Joel Fitzgibbon.
Major General Gould acknowledged the tragic loss of Lance Corporal Fitzgibbon, stating the previous incident involved a single paratrooper.
He said following the incident the ADF undertook “a very thorough review” of its parachuting systems and implemented an independent safety board, which has since reported to the chief of army on multiple occasions.
Despite the latest tragedy he maintained his faith in the military’s current protocols.
“I am very confident in the safety system as a whole around our parachutes,” he said.
Major General Gould detailed training accidents of this nature trigger a multi-layered investigative response.
Lance Corporal Fitzgibbon’s death sparked three different inquiries, including an internal safety probe, a Comcare investigation led by the commonwealth WHS regulator and a NSW coronial inquest.
Following the 2024 fatality, special forces personnel were temporarily barred from using the Military Javelin freefall parachute pending clearance from the ongoing inquiries.
In the wake of his son’s death, former defence minister Joel Fitzgibbon was appointed as a patron of the Commando Welfare Trust, vowing to build on Jack’s legacy.
Mr Marles said Warrant Officer Muddle “is very much remembered for his humour and his commitment to service”.
Mr Marles said the training was part of the ADF’s requirement to prepare soldiers for combat conditions, including night operations.
“It was part of a training block of advanced parachuting, which involved parachuting at night,” he said.
He confirmed parachuting operations across the ADF had been paused while investigations are conducted.
“There will now be a series of investigations both within the Defence Force and more broadly, and we are committed to those being as thorough as possible so that every necessary lesson is learned.”
Anthony Albanese also paid tribute to Warrant Officer Muddle, stating “our hearts go out to his Army family and the broader Defence community”.
“This tragic accident is a stark reminder that there are no easy days for those who defend our nation,” the Prime Minister said in a statement.
“We are in the debt of every Australian who serves and puts themselves on the line for all of us.
“May Warrant Officer Class Two Muddle live on in every heart he touched.”
The national chair of the Australian SAS Association, Bob Hunter, paid tribute to Warrant Officer Muddle as a respected SAS soldier who was killed during “critical operational training”.
Mr Hunter said parachuting remained “demanding and unforgiving” but was “fundamental to the role, preparedness, and operational reach of those who serve”.
“Every member who undertakes this training does so with professionalism, discipline, and an understanding of the risks, in service to Australia and alongside their mates,” he said.
Mr Hunter said “moments like this remind us not only of the cost of service, but of the strength of the bonds that exist within our community”, adding that the association was encouraging members to “look after one another, to check in on former and current comrades, and to make use of available support where needed”.
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation/defence-minister-hails-one-of-australias-finest-lachlan-muddle-after-tragic-collision/news-story/846773e65ba94a7c33642d0e98be44f3
https://x.com/ChiefAusArmy/status/2054030051729977599
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nar1ptcSV2s
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d0bc64 No.24599846
>>24424631 (pb)
>>24498482 (pb)
>>24556959 (pb)
Budget 2026: Cost of subs and frigates takes heavy toll on ADF’s purse
BEN PACKHAM - 12 May 2026
Taxpayers will spend a whopping $17bn on the AUKUS submarine program over the next four years without seeing even the first nuclear nuclear-powered boat, as core defence spending remains stuck at around 2 per cent of GDP.
Despite the government’s shift to “NATO standard” reporting of defence funding last month, which includes service pensions and other expenditure, the budget papers contained no detail of spending levels against the new measure.
Analysis by The Australian, however, reveals the defence budget is expected to be about 2.02 per cent of GDP under the old standard in 2026-27, rising to 2.2 per cent by the end of the decade.
The budget papers show the cost of the nation’s submarine ambitions hit $5.45bn this financial year alone, after about $4bn in payments to the US and UK governments to bolster their nuclear submarine industries so they can support the AUKUS plan.
The annual AUKUS cost will ease to about $3bn in 2026-27, growing steadily to nearly $5bn by the end of the decade when the navy will still be two to three years away from receiving its first Virginia-class boat from the US.
At the same time, the troubled Hunter-class frigate program is set to cost north of $2.5bn in the coming financial year, with the first of the ships not due to enter service until 2034 at the earliest.
The programs – defence’s most expensive – are draining nearly 9 per cent of the annual defence budget, which is set to hit $62.6bn in 2026-27, rising to more than $77bn by the end of the decade.
Meanwhile, the nation’s major combat fleet – including the Collins-class submarines, the Hobart-class destroyers, and the Anzac frigates – are falling short of their planned availability.
The platforms, which form the backbone of the navy, managed just 84 per cent of their planned days at sea forecast in last year’s budget.
The budget highlights ongoing problems in the rollout of the $3bn MQ-4C Triton surveillance drone program, which is on track to deliver just a third of its forecast flying hours for 2025-26.
The RAAF’s F-35 fleet is also on track to fall short of its forecast 2025-26 flying hours target by about 9 per cent.
In a budget bright spot, the Defence Department is turning around its workforce crisis, with the uniformed force on track to reach 61,711 personnel by June 30 – more than 2300 higher than forecast in last year’s document.
The budget numbers have the force growing to more than 67,400 uniformed personnel by 2029-30, a forecast that is still short of its 69,000 end-of-decade target.
The government is also making progress in slashing the numbers of star-ranked officers, which had ballooned in recent years, making the ADF one of the most top-heavy forces in the Western world.
The budget shows the number of navy one-star and above officers reduced from 74 to 79. The army has cut star-ranks from 89 to 86, while the air force numbers remain static at 63.
Much of the defence budget detail was released last month when Defence Minister Richard Marles released an updated capability investment plan and National Defence Strategy, vowing an extra $14bn over the forward estimates and $53bn over the decade.
He said defence spending was sitting at about 2.8 per cent of GDP under NATO accounting rules, and would hit about 3 per cent of GDP by 2033.
The budget confirms about $6.8bn of the new spending is from core defence funding over the coming four years, while about $4.8bn will come from the private sector in yet-to-be announced off-budget investments.
The budget is silent on how much the government hopes to raise from its sale of surplus Defence land, branding the forecasts as “not for publication” amid a major backlash over the loss of heritage properties, including Victoria Barracks sites in Sydney, Melbourne and Brisbane.
The navy’s future general purpose frigates have hit the budget’s “Top 30” list of defence acquisition projects for the first time, with forecast expenditure of $655m this coming financial year.
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation/defence/budget-2026-cost-of-subs-and-frigates-takes-heavy-toll-on-adfs-purse/news-story/d53b690e2b48e95802b284efd4b936c2
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d0bc64 No.24599858
Canberra teenager accused of plotting racist terror attack faces historic prosecution
MOHAMMAD ALFARES - 13 May 2026
A Canberra teenager has become the first person in Australia to face federal prosecution for allegedly plotting a terrorist attack in the nation’s capital, with police accusing him of preparing a “nationalist and racist extremist” attack on strangers.
The 17-year-old appeared before the ACT Children’s Court on Tuesday after being hit with additional terrorism charges by the ACT Joint Counter Terrorism Team.
It is alleges the teenager was planning an attack on people not known to him and was motivated by extremist nationalist and racist ideology.
The youth is now charged with one count of acts in preparation for, or planning, a terrorist act, which carries a maximum penalty of life imprisonment.
He has also been charged with one count of transmitting violent extremist material, which carries a maximum penalty of five years imprisonment.
The teenager was first arrested on November 5 after investigators allegedly uncovered violent extremist material during a search warrant.
He has remained behind bars since his arrest.
Police will allege further evidence uncovered during the investigation showed the boy had shared violent extremist propaganda and was preparing to carry out a terrorist act.
AFP Assistant Commissioner Peter Crozier described the case as a disturbing example of young Australians being exposed to extremist ideology online.
“Violent extremist material is circulated by terrorist organisations to promote violence, hate and division within Australian society,” Assistant Commissioner Crozier said.
“The AFP and our law enforcement and national security partners will continue to work tirelessly to keep Australians safe.
“It is our job to defend and protect the Australian community, and we will relentlessly pursue those who seek harm to our democracy or our social cohesion.”
Mr Crozier said parents, schools, social services and technology companies all had a role to play in preventing young people from accessing extremist propaganda.
ACT Policing deputy chief police officer Richard Chin said the priority of police was to prevent access to extremist material and to educate young people in Canberra.
He said parents and teachers were often the first to notice warning signs of radicalisation among young people.
“Recognising early signs of changes in a young person’s behaviour can play a crucial role in guiding young people to safe and supportive pathways,” he said.
The matter will return to the ACT Children’s Court at a later date.
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation/canberra-teenager-accused-of-plotting-racist-terror-attack-faces-historic-prosecution/news-story/4f4552f1bc2a98fb350473c5caf0e97d
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d0bc64 No.24599875
>>24544743 (pb)
>>24544749 (pb)
>>24544749 (pb)
Virginia Giuffre’s memoir named book of the year
Judges praise Epstein accuser’s bravery and say her book, Nobody’s Girl, could change the world
Andrea Hamblin - 12 May 2026
Virginia Roberts Giuffre’s memoir about her time being sex trafficked by Jeffrey Epstein won the top honour at the British Book Awards on Monday night.
Giuffre’s book, which also detailed allegations against Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor and other high-profile men, was named book of the year at a ceremony at Grosvenor House in London.
It also won the prize for non-fiction narrative book of the year, as well as being named the joint winner of the Freedom to Publish prize alongside Careless People, a book by Meta whistleblower Sarah Wynn-Williams.
In a video played during the ceremony, Sky Roberts, Giuffre’s brother, said his family was “truly honoured” to accept the awards on behalf of his late sister.
Nobody’s Girl: A Memoir Of Surviving Abuse And Fighting For Justice was co-written with Amy Wallace and released six months after Giuffre took her own life, aged 41, at her farm north of Perth, Western Australia.
In the memoir, Giuffre detailed how she was allegedly forced by Epstein, the paedophile financier, and his co-accused Ghislaine Maxwell, to have sex with some of the world’s most powerful men.
She claimed she was paid $15,000 (about £11,000) for “servicing the man the tabloids called ‘Randy Andy’” – a reference to Prince Andrew.
Giuffre wrote that the then Prince “was friendly enough but still entitled – as if he believed having sex with me was his birthright”.
She had accused him of raping and abusing her on three separate occasions when she was 17. Mr Mountbatten-Windsor has denied the allegations and a civil claim brought in the US was settled out of court with no admission of guilt.
The judges wrote that Giuffre’s memoir was a “testament to the importance of serious non-fiction”, with one noting: “I am a better person for having read this book”.
Nobody’s Girl “will stay in my bones”, one judge said. Another predicted that it would “change the world”.
They said Doubleday, the publisher, had “set the gold standard for how to publish bravely and with integrity”.
“The team did an incredible job at honouring Giuffre’s memory, her story and her words,” the judges said, adding that the memoir “stands as the most important book of 2025 for its bravery”.
The awards ceremony also commemorated Dame Jilly Cooper with a posthumous award.
Dame Jilly died unexpectedly in October 2025, aged 88. She was best known for her raunchy 1980s romance novel Rivals, which was adapted into an award-winning television series that is now in its second season.
Philip Jones, editor of The Bookseller and chairman of the judges at the British Book Awards, said: “Our winners represent the very best of the book trade, standing up for the books and the authors when others would try to stand them down.
“The British Book Awards affirms our creatives, our entertainers and our truth-tellers, and we applaud those who did so much to bring their work to the public.
“In 2025 the importance of the book was manifest, it was a beacon to many and a heartbeat for all.”
https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2026/05/12/virginia-giuffre-memoir-british-book-award/
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d0bc64 No.24599898
‘Kevin, what the hell was that?’ Why Rudd thinks Trump will stand by Taiwan
Michael Koziol - May 12, 2026
1/2
New York: The late Hulk Hogan was warming up the crowd for Donald Trump at the 2024 Republican National Convention (RNC) – by ripping off his shirt – when China’s ambassador to the United States, Xie Feng, leant over to Kevin Rudd and asked: “Kevin, what the hell was that?”
Rudd, then Australia’s ambassador to the US, and himself lightly bemused by the spectacle, replied: “We should have a chat tomorrow.”
The two men had tea the next day at the Milwaukee Club, where Rudd explained why it would not be wise for China to try to make a move on Taiwan under a Trump presidency.
“The whole Hulk Hogan phenomenon is seeking to underline, underscore, what President Trump has seen as his essential strength for office, and that is: I am a strongman,” says Rudd.
“And if you have anything in your mind which is likely to render me [Trump] to look weak, then frankly, I’m going to double down, retaliate, in order to reassert my strength.”
Rudd recounted this story on Monday night (US time) at an event in New York City with the Asia Society, the think tank he rejoined as global president and chief executive after resigning the ambassadorship last month.
They were among his first public comments since he left the role of Australia’s chief diplomat in Washington after three years to return to China scholarship.
Rudd said he told his Chinese counterpart at the RNC that if China believed it wise to use force to change the status quo in Taiwan, “the immediate consequence would be to make President Trump look weak in the world and also in the United States”.
Trump “could and would do anything in order to reassert his strength, and therefore we’re in the business of escalation, crisis conflict and potentially war”.
“To my Chinese friends, I said, ‘Do not do this’,” Rudd recounted. “President Trump, I think, understands this intuitively, which is why I’d be very surprised if the language [on Taiwan] was to change in any way.”
The remarks from Rudd, who is considered one of the world’s leading China scholars, came on the eve of Trump’s highly anticipated trip to Beijing. He leaves Washington on Tuesday (Washington time) for the first visit to China by a sitting US president since Trump went in 2017, during his first term.
Foreign policy commentators have speculated about Trump changing US policy regarding Taiwan as part of a grand bargain with Chinese President Xi Jinping on trade and other economic matters. But the administration has played down that possibility ahead of the visit.
“Not unlike discussions on Iran, Russia and all the hotspots – or potential hotspots – there is an ongoing conversation about Taiwan,” a senior US official said on a briefing call.
“The last couple of times [Trump and Xi] have interacted it has been a point of discussion. There has been no change of US policy coming out of those, and we don’t expect to see any changes in US policy going forward.”
(continued)
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d0bc64 No.24599899
>>24599898
2/2
However, Trump indicated a willingness to engage with Xi about future American arms sales to Taiwan, which China claims as its territory.
Asked on Monday (US time) whether he believed the US should keep selling weapons to Taiwan, Trump said: “Well, I’m going to have that discussion with President Xi. President Xi would like us not to, and I’ll have that discussion.”
The Trump administration in December approved the largest-ever arms sale to Taiwan, worth $US11.1 billion ($15.3 billion) – a fact that a senior US official highlighted on a briefing call with reporters.
Trump said Taiwan always came up in discussions with Xi, but he did not want to see any aggression by China akin to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.
“We’re very far away. We’re 9500 miles, he [Xi] is 67 miles. It’s a little bit of a difference. But there’s a lot of support for Taiwan from Japan, from countries in that area,” Trump said.
Lisa Curtis, the director of the Indo-Pacific program at the Centre for a New American Security, and a National Security Council adviser to Trump in his first term, said it was more likely Trump would make concessions on arms sales to Taiwan than change long-standing US policy on Taiwanese independence.
Taiwan and the war in Iran are expected to play a significant role in this week’s meeting, though both leaders want to focus on the trade relationship between the world’s two largest economies.
Trump wants Beijing to agree to purchase more soybeans from American farmers, as well as Boeing aircraft. It follows a thawing of economic relations during a brief meeting in Busan, South Korea, last year in which Trump agreed to lower tariffs and Xi relaxed export controls on rare earths.
The White House confirmed that a delegation of 17 high-powered American business leaders, including Elon Musk, will accompany Trump on the visit.
The Tesla and SpaceX boss will be joined by outgoing Apple chief executive Tim Cook, BlackRock’s Larry Fink, Goldman Sachs’ chairman and CEO David Solomon, and Boeing’s president and chief executive Kelly Ortberg, among others.
Two women are in the delegation: Dina Powell, the president and vice-chair of Mark Zuckerberg’s Meta, and Trump’s former deputy national security adviser, as well as Jane Fraser, the chief executive of Citigroup.
https://www.theage.com.au/world/north-america/kevin-what-the-hell-was-that-why-rudd-thinks-trump-will-stand-by-taiwan-20260512-p5zw03.html
https://qresear.ch/?q=Kevin+Rudd
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d0bc64 No.24599907
>>24599898
Donald Trump must appeal to China’s self-interest on Iran, says Kevin Rudd, as Taiwan tensions loom over Beijing summit
JOE KELLY and YONI BASHAN - 12 May 2026
1/2
Donald Trump must appeal to China’s urgent economic self-interest when he meets Xi Jinping this week to discuss reopening the Strait of Hormuz, according to former prime minister Kevin Rudd, who says it would be a mistake to frame the discussion as an American request for assistance.
In his first public comments as the returning chief executive of The Asia Society, the former Australian ambassador to Washington also told an audience in New York that he didn’t expect to see a rhetorical shift on Taiwan and that Beijing’s domestic economic concerns provided Washington with unexpected leverage to resolve the Iran crisis.
“It’s important for the United States to understand that China, for its own domestic economic reasons, wants to see the straits reopened,” Dr Rudd said. “As the President arrives, he needs to have in the back of his mind the fact that whatever is said publicly … China wants to see this over.”
Dr Rudd said China’s leadership had already voiced concerns that the Iran crisis would further depress global growth – a concern that could prove decisive as the two leaders meet in Beijing for a three-day summit beginning on Wednesday evening.
China is preparing an elaborate reception for Mr Trump, closing the Temple of Heaven for two days in a spectacle echoing his 2017 Forbidden City tour. The pageantry signals Beijing’s determination to stabilise a relationship still reeling from a bruising trade war.
The two presidents last met in South Korea six months ago, agreeing to pause hostilities in which the US imposed triple-digit tariffs on Chinese goods while Beijing threatened to restrict the global supply of rare earths.
Yet despite goodwill gestures, relations remain fragile. Washington has ramped up sanctions against Chinese companies in recent days, with the Treasury Department designating three individuals and nine companies over Iranian oil sales to China conducted through front companies. Separate sanctions have targeted Chinese organisations accused of helping Iran’s military secure weapons and raw materials, as well as companies allegedly providing satellite imagery of US facilities to Tehran.
A high-powered delegation of American business leaders with significant China exposure will accompany Mr Trump, including Tesla and SpaceX chief Elon Musk, Apple’s Tim Cook, GE Aerospace’s Larry Culp and Boeing’s Kelly Ortberg.
The roster also features Meta’s Dina Powell McCormick, Blackrock’s Larry Fink, Blackstone’s Stephen Schwarzman, Micron’s Sanjay Mehrotra, Mastercard’s Michael Miebach, Qualcomm’s Cristiano Amon and Visa’s Ryan McInerney.
Notably absent is Nvidia’s chief executive Jensen Huang, whose company powers the global artificial intelligence boom. Despite developing a strong relationship with Mr Trump and expressing a willingness to attend, Mr Huang was not invited.
The US President conditionally approved exports of Nvidia’s H200 AI chips to China in December, though Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick said in mid-April they had not been sold, citing difficulties with Chinese companies securing permission while being encouraged to invest in domestic technology.
Mr Ortberg is counting on the Trump administration to help unlock a long-awaited order that could include 500 737 MAX jets plus dozens of widebody aircraft to meet China’s surging domestic demand – the country’s first major Boeing order since 2017.
(continued)
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d0bc64 No.24599908
>>24599907
2/2
Dr Rudd played down the prospects of any significant shift in US policy on Taiwan, revealing he had advised Chinese ambassador to the US Xie Feng in 2024 not to misread a second Trump administration’s position on the island.
The pair discussed the matter at the Republican National Convention in Milwaukee, where wrestler Hulk Hogan ripped off his shirt while introducing Mr Trump. When Mr Xie asked Dr Rudd how to interpret the moment, the former prime minister used it to explain why military action against Taiwan could be disastrous.
“The whole Hulk Hogan phenomenon is seeking to underline what President Trump has seen as his essential strength for office, and that is: ‘I am a strong man’,” Dr Rudd said. “The immediate consequence (of military action) would be to make President Trump look weak.
“And therefore President Trump, under those circumstances, could and would do anything in order to reassert his strength. And therefore we’re in the business of escalation, crisis, conflict and potentially war.”
Chinese state media has positioned Taiwan as the unequivocal focus of the summit for Beijing. An editorial in the People’s Daily – the official newspaper of the Central Committee of the Chinese Communist Party – dedicated substantial attention to Taiwan on Tuesday, describing it as “the first inviolable red line in China-US relations” and calling on Washington to “adhere to the one-China principle”.
China considers Taiwan part of its territory and has not ruled out military means in the pursuit of seeking unification.
Mr Trump told reporters on Monday that he intended to discuss US arms sales to Taiwan with Mr Xi, a break with the diplomatic tradition of not discussing arms sales with Beijing during bilateral meetings.
Mr Xi has already warned Mr Trump to exercise “extreme caution” following approval of an $11bn arms package in December. A further deal looms, with Taiwan’s parliament approving special funding last week to buy additional weapons.
“I’m going to have that discussion,” Mr Trump told reporters. “President Xi would like us not to. And I’ll have that discussion.”
Dr Rudd argued both presidents had compelling reasons to seek strategic stability until the end of 2027, suggesting the summit could mark a turning point in the fraught relationship between the world’s two largest economies.
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/world/donald-trump-must-appeal-to-chinas-selfinterest-on-iran-says-kevin-rudd-as-taiwan-tensions-loom-over-beijing-summit/news-story/15d905c36f8f8b3c9ea9b8e8c319b06f
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d0bc64 No.24599941
>>24295317 (pb)
Australia’s Trump Tower plans scrapped as developer says brand has become ‘toxic’
Lex Harvey - 13 May 2026
Plans to build Australia’s first Trump Tower have been scrapped just three months after it was announced, with the local developer saying the Trump brand has become “toxic.”
“Let’s just say that with the Iran war and everything else, the Trump brand was increasingly unpopular in Australia,” David Young, CEO of Altus Property Group, told CNN in a statement.
The 91-story Trump International Hotel & Tower Gold Coast was billed as Australia’s tallest tower, featuring a 285-room luxury hotel, high-end retail plaza, restaurants and residential apartments finished to Trump specifications, according to a February press release from Altus announcing the deal.
The project sparked backlash after it was announced by Altus and the Trump Organization, which is owned by US President Donald Trump but run by his sons Donald Jr. and Eric.
The luxury seaside property was the Trump Organization’s “first official project in Australia,” Eric Trump said at the time.
CNN has reached out to the Trump Organization for comment.
One petition aiming to stop the project garnered more than 140,000 signatures.
CK, who started the petition under an alias to avoid backlash from Trump supporters, told CNN in February she felt powerless while watching scenes of “anti-immigrant violence and the social division” in the US on social media, and looked for a way to express her opposition.
Young said the tower will still proceed — but without the Trump name.
In a LinkedIn post Tuesday, the Altus CEO called the backlash to the Trump Tower “grossly unfair” but said “the brand in this country has become toxic to Australians.”
“Trump Org is a non-political, free of the President run organization by Eric and Don Jr and run well with over 136 resorts and towers globally yet here in Australia both the media and certain orgs paint a picture of Donald Trump for pure sensationalism,” Young said.
He said there is “no acrimony between the Trump family and myself” and he has been in discussions with “many high-end luxury plans” about the tower.
Young had laid the groundwork for the tower in 2007 with a “cold call to Ivanka Trump,” according to a blog post on the Altus website.
Young recalled introducing himself to Trump’s daughter as a property developer from Australia, who was intent on building “Australia’s finest tourist property at Surfers Paradise.”
Almost 20 years later, when the deal was signed, Young said the tower “will be an Australian, not American project,” according to comments published in The Australian newspaper.
He had anticipated the building could be ready before the Brisbane Olympics in 2032.
But Gold Coast Mayor Tom Tate — who once dined with Trump in Mar-a-Lago and was an enthusiastic supporter of the project — said a development application had never been submitted to City Council.
“This project was an agreement between two private parties,” Tate said in a statement to CNN, adding “we didn’t have a proposal to consider.”
Money could also have been a factor, according to Tate.
“The Trump Organization wants a lot more for their brand on the funding side of things, to operate it and the percentage of return,” Tate told the Australian Broadcasting Corporation.
“(Meanwhile) the developer’s going, ‘Well, I’m putting in all of my money in and you’re actually going to take quite a lot of profit’, so I think that’s why they’re parting ways.”
https://edition.cnn.com/2026/05/12/australia/australia-trump-tower-scrapped-intl-hnk
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d0bc64 No.24599944
>>>>24599941
The brief rise and fall of Trump tower in Australia
Brittney Levinson - May 13, 2026
It was a deal supposedly 19 years in the making, but it took just a few months for a grand $1.5 billion scheme to build a Trump tower on the Gold Coast to fall apart.
The Queensland developer spruiking the project says the “increasingly toxic” Trump name was behind the deal’s demise, and insists the tower could still be built without the US president’s name on it. The Trump Organisation says it was the developer’s inability to meet basic financial obligations that scuttled the plan.
“In the end, they couldn’t reach a win-win situation,” Gold Coast Mayor Tom Tate, who was previously an enthusiastic supporter of the plan, said on Wednesday.
In February, plans came to light for a 91-storey tower that at 335 metres could be Australia’s tallest, with 285 luxury hotel rooms and 272 residential apartments in a gold-tinted high-rise bearing the Trump name.
Late on Tuesday, the Trump Organisation revealed the project was no more. “While we were very excited about the opportunity to bring a world-class development to the Gold Coast, the project was dependent on our licensing partner meeting certain obligations. Unfortunately, those obligations were not fulfilled,” a spokeswoman said.
Altus Property Group chief executive David Young said the failure had little to do with not meeting obligations and all to do with what Australians had come to think about the US president.
“Let’s just say that with the Iran war and everything else, the Trump brand was increasingly toxic in Australia,” Young said.
Young later said on LinkedIn he found it “grossly unfair as the brand has nothing to do with the president”.
The Trump Organisation spokeswoman told The Brisbane Times Young’s attempts to blame the Iran war was “merely a ploy to distract from his own defaults and failures”. She added that Altus Property Group was unable to meet the most basic financial obligation that was due upon the execution of the agreement.
Young refused to comment further on what obligations he did not meet. However, he has still not reached settlement on the block of land and no development application was ever submitted for the project.
The project’s collapse will come as no surprise to industry figures who were sceptical from the start. In March, a leading Queensland property industry figure, speaking on the condition of anonymity, called it a “pipe dream”, while architecture experts said it was difficult to imagine it going ahead.
Luke Woollard, who owns a property management business in Victoria, wrote on LinkedIn he’d seen the project’s collapse “coming a mile away”. “Too ambitious,” he added.
Before the surprise Trump tower deal emerged, little was known about Young, who was born in the US and grew up in regional Queensland.
As he told it, Young’s story was compelling. In a blog post he described himself as a brash young pub operator in 2007 who cold-called Ivanka Trump to gauge the family’s interest in partnering on an Australian property. Nearly 20 years went by before Young and Eric Trump met at Mar-a-Lago to sign the hotel management and brand licensing agreement.
Young faced stumbling blocks almost from day one. After his big announcement, the developer was uncontactable, which was unusual for someone touting his most ambitious project yet.
Within days, Young was no longer working with the public relations firm he had engaged for the announcement and had hired an experienced crisis manager to run his communications.
By then, Young’s troubled business history had emerged, including two bankruptcies and hacking charges in the late 1990s. He was also unable to detail any large-scale properties he had developed or overseen, saying questions over whether he had experience in building high-rise towers were “not relevant”.
The latest in a series of failed plans
The Trump project is the latest failed plan for the prime piece of Surfers Paradise real estate.
The waterfront Trickett Street block has been vacant since 2013 when the Iluka resort was demolished.
In 2015, Chinese developer Forise proposed a $1.2 billion high-rise residential tower on the site, dubbed Spirit, but plans were quashed when Forise collapsed.
A company controlled by Macau casino boss Loi Keong Kuong took over the site and the luxury project in 2019, and still owns the land today.
The company has been attempting to offload the property for a number of years.
Despite the project’s collapse, Young said he would still pursue a luxury development at the Trickett Street site.
He insisted there was no acrimony between himself and the Trump family and said the project would go ahead without the Trump name attached.
“It is pure business,” Young said.
https://www.afr.com/property/commercial/the-brief-rise-and-fall-of-trump-tower-in-australia-20260513-p5zwan
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d0bc64 No.24603494
>>24569474 (pb)
Jewish aged care homes hire armed guards as police briefing warns of antisemitism
Annika Smethurst and Grant McArthur - May 13, 2026
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Jewish aged care homes have hired armed guards to protect residents after escalating security fears over antisemitic behaviour in Victoria.
The Royal Commission on Antisemitism and Social Cohesion has heard that incidents across three homes, which care for 400 residents, included a bomb threat, constant hate mail and a man who stood outside threatening to kill those inside.
Jewish Care Victoria chief executive Gayle Smith said the organisation was facing a $1.8 million bill for the guards and other security measures.
“For our aged care residents, obviously, that’s a very frightening experience to be advised that there’s a bomb threat occurring,” she told the commission last week.
“We have a number of direct Holocaust survivors, and then second and third-generation Holocaust survivors who are using our facilities, who are now walking past a guarded building for their aged loved ones.
“And no other aged care provider in Australia will be needing to do the same thing.
“It’s a really uncomfortable position for us to be, but the choice is not tenable … if we did not take that action and something happened, I personally would never be able to forgive myself.”
Smith said the escalating threat of antisemitism after Hamas’s October 7, 2023, terrorist attacks and Israel’s military response included a man standing in front of a Jewish Care Victoria building telling staff, “if you are going to kill people, I am going to kill you”, and a bomb threat that forced one of their care homes into lockdown.
Smith said Jewish Care Victoria had applied for different rounds of Commonwealth funding to help cover the costs, in September and November 2023, as well as state government funding in May 2024, but was rejected each time.
Jewish Care Victoria was eventually able to gain a small amount of funding in August 2024 under a program administered through the Executive Council of Australian Jewry.
Smith also used her time before the commission to accuse Premier Jacinta Allan and senior ministers of declining to act over claims a state government-funded multicultural agency refused to work with a Jewish social services organisation due to a “misalignment” of values.
Smith said Jewish Care Victoria had sought out the specialist multicultural youth services organisation in September 2025 because it wanted help in designing a mental health program for young Jewish people.
“They had originally agreed to work with us, and that had commenced,” she said. “We then received that communication that they would no longer work with us, and were advised that the decision had been made due to a misalignment of values.
“They then advised that, and I’m paraphrasing, that they were unable to work with us because their constituents and stakeholders would not approve of them working with a Jewish organisation.
“They also added that Jewish youth didn’t need their services because they weren’t poor.”
Smith said that, in separate responses, the premier and Minister for Multicultural Affairs Ingrid Stitt had deferred responsibility to the Human Rights and Equal Opportunity Commission.
“It looks like people are acting. We get a lot of acknowledgement and sympathy, but we get very little action.
“We came to the conclusion that we had to deal with it again on our own.”
(continued)
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d0bc64 No.24603495
>>24603494
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Smith’s evidence comes as a Victoria Police document, released under freedom of information, shows the force outlined mounting concerns about antisemitism, extremist rhetoric and threats against synagogues to Jewish community leaders and the state government in the weeks after October 7.
The briefing included warnings that an Islamic State publication had urged supporters “to target Jewish civilians and synagogues everywhere”.
Victoria Police said it had already “tasked resources to patrol and ensure the safety of persons at Jewish schools and synagogues” and was engaging with Jewish organisations to understand what events might require “a police presence and/or patrols”.
The document detailed incidents that had already unfolded across Melbourne, including Nazi salutes on a suburban train, threats directed at Jewish residents and allegations of antisemitic harassment.
The force established Operation Park that month to investigate offences associated with the Middle East conflict.
It has since received 530 reports of antisemitism, and 60 reports of Islamophobia, leading to 313 arrests. Police have also made 15,500 visits to Jewish community sites, including schools, synagogues and community halls.
While police stressed, there was “no known intelligence for any planned violent activity” at the time the document was prepared, warnings about threats to Jewish institutions would later intensify.
On October 12, 2023, ASIO director-general Mike Burgess said the agency was concerned about “the potential for opportunistic violence with little or no warning”.
By August 2024, ASIO had raised Australia’s national terrorism threat level from “possible” to “probable”, and in February 2025, Burgess said he was concerned “attacks have not yet plateaued”.
The Adass Israel synagogue in the south-east Melbourne suburb of Ripponlea was extensively damaged in a December 2024 firebombing. Two men were charged and remain before the courts. In August 2025, the Albanese government expelled Iran’s ambassador, citing “credible intelligence” the attack had been directed by the Iranian regime through local proxies.
Allan said places of worship should be a sanctuary and her government had delivered millions in funding to boost security and support the state’s Jewish community.
“I didn’t need a police briefing to know synagogues were at risk after October 7,” she said. “We all saw Central Shule targeted with disruptive protests almost immediately.
“That’s why we funded extra security for synagogues, introduced Australia’s toughest anti-hate laws, criminalised protests outside places of worship, and implemented every recommendation of the antisemitism envoy.
“There is clearly more to do. This royal commission will tell us where governments and organisations got it wrong, and what must happen next, and I am listening.”
Asked about the briefing, Victoria Police told this masthead it had launched an operation centred on addressing antisemitism and deployed proactive patrols to prominent Jewish locations three weeks before the briefing to community leaders.
“Police resourcing is also regularly bolstered around major cultural and religious periods, including high holy days such as Hanukkah,” it said in a statement.
https://www.theage.com.au/national/jewish-aged-care-homes-hire-armed-guards-as-police-briefing-warns-of-antisemitism-20260507-p5zuks.html
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d0bc64 No.24603528
>>24603494
Peak Jewish body says $600 million federal budget response to antisemitic Bondi terror attack 'modest'
Shannon Corvo - 13 May 2026
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The head of Australia's peak Jewish body has welcomed a $600 million federal budget funding commitment in response to the antisemitic Bondi terror attack, but says it is a "small comfort" for those who lost loved ones.
Part of the funding would cover security enhancements, mental health resources and support for Jewish organisations.
It includes $8.1 million per year ongoing towards national initiatives such as firearms reform, changes within the education sector, and to the Australian Federal Police to strengthen national security.
As he announced the contents of this year's budget, Treasurer Jim Chalmers said the government was focused on national unity following the December 14 mass shooting, where 15 people were killed.
More than $218 million over four years would go towards the immediate response to support the victims, their families and the wider community, including:
• $102 million to the Executive Council of Australian Jewry for enhanced security for the Jewish community
• $22 million over three years from 2026-27 to the Executive Council of Australian Jewry to ensure enhanced security of the Australian Jewish community, funded via the confiscated assets account
• $68.8 million to the Australian Federal Police for the National Security Investigations teams
• $42.9 million over two years for immediate mental health support for the Jewish community, the broader Bondi community, first responders and young people
• $4 million for Jewish House and JewishCare to support the victims and families
A further $46.7 million over four years would provide financial support to the wider Jewish community, including $4.4 million for a closed non-competitive grant opportunity for priority projects in the Chabad of Bondi and $3.1 million over four years for the National Jewish Memorial Centre for infrastructure improvements.
In January, some Bondi terror attack victims and their families called for increased financial support and streamlined access to it, stating what was available at the time was "not appropriate".
'Very small comfort'
Executive Council of Australian Jewry Co-CEO Peter Wertheim said they welcomed the announcement but wished it was not necessary.
"We much prefer to live in an Australia without antisemitism and without the security funding," he said.
The executive council would be responsible for divvying out the funds to about 160 Jewish organisations across the country.
"Who have had to spend vast quantities of money now on guarding costs, in some cases on security infrastructure, like blast-proof windows and fireproof doors … which they wouldn't have had to do in the past," he said.
"This is on the advice of police, counterterrorism, and other security experts who have said that, unfortunately, this sort of expenditure is necessary."
Mr Wertheim said some of the funding had already been committed, including for enhanced security, mental health support and some services.
He said the new funding was "really quite modest".
More than $130 million was earmarked to pay for the Royal Commission on Antisemitism and Social Cohesion.
"I think it'll be very small comfort to those who have lost loved ones in the shootings of Bondi," Mr Wertheim said.
(continued)
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d0bc64 No.24603531
>>24603528
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Lynda Ben-Menashe, the president of the National Council of Jewish Women Australia, said while additional security was important, it needed to go beyond just physical protection.
She said Jewish groups were increasingly diverting their money to safety measures, at the expense of other community activities.
"We certainly welcome funding to build higher fences, which is necessary, but we would very much welcome much more funding to build bridges," she said.
NSW Treasurer Daniel Mookhey also welcomed the extra federal funding, and said it would help grieving communities recover.
When asked whether the state government would provide similar funding in its own upcoming budget, Mr Mookhey said several support measures had been announced in the immediate aftermath of last year's deadly shooting.
He hinted there could be more to come.
"We're working very closely with the Jewish Board of Deputies and others to make sure that the victims and the survivors — particularly the families of those who lost loved ones — are cared for, for the rest of their lives," he said.
Strengthening national security
More than $207 million over five years, followed by $8.1 million per year thereafter, had been allocated to combat antisemitism and respond to recommendations made in a plan developed by Australia's special envoy to tackle the issue.
This included:
• $80 million over two years to further counterterrorism threats online as well as prevent violent extremism and youth radicalisation
• $32.6 million for public awareness campaigns to strengthen Australia's national security and social cohesion
• $20 million over four years for the Department of Education to extend and expand the Together for Humanity program to address social cohesion
• $13.6 million, and $1.1 million per year ongoing, for the Department of Home Affairs to implement new visa refusal and cancellation grounds, with changes to character tests
• An undisclosed amount to support national firearms licensing reforms
Combating antisemitism in schools
The Royal Commission on Antisemitism and Social Cohesion, which began public hearings last week, heard first-hand accounts of the rise of antisemitic incidents and their impacts on children.
The federal government had allocated $10 million over two years in the budget to the Department of Education to expand teacher training, support antisemitism research and review the Australian curriculum.
Six million dollars over five years would be used to establish an online teacher resource hub to provide schools with free resources on how to strengthen social cohesion, with a focus on antisemitism.
The department was also given $5 million over two years to establish a 12-month antisemitism education taskforce.
https://www.abc.net.au/news/2026-05-13/federal-budget-response-to-jewish-community-post-bondi-attack/106673140
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d0bc64 No.24603539
>>24577960 (pb)
>>24544690 (pb)
>>24544697 (pb)
NSW Police were warned of Bondi terror suspect months before ASIO knew
STEPHEN RICE - 14 May 2026
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A Jewish community security group warned NSW Police about Bondi terror accused Naveed Akram three months before he first came to the attention of ASIO, detailing his association with members of a street preaching group that operated as a major recruiting ground for Islamic State.
The Community Service Group (CSG) identified Akram in an email to the NSW Police Operational Assessment Centre on 10 July 2019, with information about the “key membership” of the Bankstown Dawah, to be disseminated to the NSW Terrorism Intelligence Unit and the Engagement and Intervention Unit.
That was three months earlier than Anthony Albanese stated as the first time the Australian Security Intelligence Organisation became aware of Akram, when he spoke on the day after the deadly shooting.
“The son first came to attention in October 2019,” the Prime Minister told a press conference on December 15. “He was examined on the basis of being associated with others, and the assessment was made that there was no indication of any ongoing threat or threat of him engaging in violence.”
That suggests that NSW Police may not have passed on the CSG intelligence to their federal counter-terrorism counterparts.
The timing of the CSG email also raises fresh questions about the highly unusual three year duration it took for NSW police to assess and approve an application for a gun licence by Akram’s father, Sajid, who was killed in the attack, and whether the delay was linked to suspicions about the associations of his son.
Sajid Akram applied for the licence in June 2020 but it wasn’t issued until July 2023.
An internal alert to NSW counter-terrorism police may not have reached the NSW Firearms Registry, which did not have digitised records until 2023.
The CSG email to police, which has been seen by The Australian, is headed: “Please be aware of Salafi organisation ‘Bankstown Dawah’ which maintains concerning membership and activity in Sydney.”
The email notes that the group conducts regular street preaching near the Bankstown train station, identifying Naveed Akram and seven other “closely associated individuals” including Youssef Uweinat, Radwan Dakkak and Joseph Saadieh, all later convicted of terror offences.
The email then names a further four “prominent Salafi individuals” who have attended Bankstown Dawah activities, including self-styled Islamic preacher Mohammad Junaid Thorne, jailed in 2021 on drug charges and recently refused parole because of his extensive correspondence with convicted terrorists while in prison.
(continued)
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d0bc64 No.24603541
>>24603539
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Links between Akram and convicted Islamic State terrorist Youssef Uweinat were first revealed by The Australian two days after the Bondi attack, with photos showing the pair together at prayer meetings and events held by the Dawah Street Movement months before Uweinat was charged with terror offences.
Uweinat, also known as Abu Musa al-Maqdisi, was jailed for nearly four years after being convicted of membership of a terrorist organisation and advocating a terrorist act.
Uweinat, who also called himself The Black Lion, posted calls for violence against non-Muslims, urging “Don’t spare none at all, kill them all, it is now time to rise, slit their throats and watch them die.”
Last year Uweinat climbed above the crowd at the August 3 pro-Palestine march across the Sydney Harbour Bridge and waved a black Shahada flag.
Video from the protest showed him standing alongside jihadist preacher Wissam Haddad, notorious for indoctrinating young people through his Al Madina Dawah Centre and his links with the Street Dawah Movement.
Radwan Dakkak was arrested a week before CSG sent the email, amid a series of counter-terrorism raids that also swept up his friend, Islamic State member Isaac El Matari
The then-23-year-old was jailed in 2020 for associating with El Matari, the self-declared commander of Islamic State in Australia, who also planned to create an ISIS stronghold in the Blue Mountains.
Just days after Dakkak’s release he began looking up material about executions, beheadings and torture and was convicted of breaching an anti-terror release order.
Joseph Saadieh was arrested in June 2021 for pledging allegiance to Islamic State and jailed in 2025.
The CSG is a Jewish community security organisation that provides on-site security, threat monitoring for schools, synagogues and community centres, emergency response and antisemitic incident reporting.
CSG NSW prepared a protection plan for the Chanukah by the Sea event and passed on its threat assessment to NSW Police on 8 December 2025, a week before the massacre, characterising its threat rating as ‘high’, and stating ‘a terrorist attack against the NSW Jewish community is likely and there is a high level of antisemitic vilification’.
The protection plan did not make provision for armed CSG guards because NSW law does not permit CSG NSW personnel to carry firearms at events in public places.
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation/politics/nsw-police-were-warned-of-bondi-terror-suspect-months-before-asio-knew/news-story/64f06ddf754602c711249b04415e95ba
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d0bc64 No.24603571
>>24592865 (pb)
Police barred from using ‘intifada’ chant footage in Hash Tayeh prosecution
MOHAMMAD ALFARES - 14 May 2026
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A magistrate has barred Victoria Police from using footage of protesters chanting “intifada” and “from the river to the sea” in the landmark prosecution of pro-Palestinian activist Hash Tayeh, dealing a major setback to police efforts to prove his “all Zionists are terrorists” chant was criminally insulting.
The ruling came as Mr Tayeh’s legal team fight to tender a lengthy expert report by Deakin University academic Andrew Thomas tracing the history of Zionism and Palestinian resistance movements, including political violence and terrorism.
Police are seeking to have large parts of the report thrown out, arguing the case is about whether the words “all Zionists are terrorists” were insulting in public, not a “history lesson” on the Middle East.
Police had sought to rely on footage from the “Our Babies Matter” rally in Melbourne in 2025 showing protesters chanting “intifada” in the minutes before Mr Tayeh grabbed the microphone and yelled “all Zionists are terrorists”, arguing the mood of the crowd mattered when assessing whether his own words were insulting.
But Melbourne Magistrate Malcolm Thomas ruled the footage risked unfairly prejudicing the court against Mr Tayeh and would spark a “collateral trial” over the meaning of politically charged slogans not tied to the charges.
The decision strips prosecutors of key evidence they had hoped to use to demonstrate the intent behind Mr Tayeh’s remarks, narrowing the case to whether his own words alone breached Victoria’s offensive language laws.
Mr Tayeh, the former owner of the Burgertory fast-food chain, faces multiple charges under section 17(1)(c) of the Summary Offences Act over chants allegedly made during pro-Palestinian protests in Melbourne in 2024 and 2025.
His co-accused, Melbourne kunafa chef Jad Awwad Abu Alsendyan, also faces charges.
The charges relate to two separate protests: the “Our Babies Matter” rally on May 27, 2024, and the “Protest Until Ceasefire” demonstration on March 30, 2025.
Defence lawyer Sarala Fitzgerald told the court the controversial slogan, created by Mr Tayeh, was used to raise awareness of the “unlawful occupation of Palestinian lands”.
Magistrate Thomas is now weighing whether to admit the massive expert report by Dr Thomas, which details the history of Zionism and the “Nakba” or “catastrophe” of 1948.
While he has not yet ruled on the report’s admissibility, he flagged reluctance to ignore historical context, stating that the evaluation of the charges is a “difficult and delicate process” where “history cannot be divorced”.
(continued)
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d0bc64 No.24603574
>>24603571
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The defence argued that the expert report by Dr Thomas was critical to “translating” the “worldwide” political discourse Mr Tayeh was participating in.
Ms Fitzgerald told the court that the “historical context of both protests is critical” and must inform whether the phrase “all Zionists are terrorists” constitutes an insult or a statement of belief.
“We will argue that the phrase ‘all Zionists are terrorists’ is both a statement of political belief and a political slogan that is used by supporters of Palestine, including the accused, to raise awareness of the historical and current unlawful occupation of Palestinian lands, and to protest its continued unlawful occupation,” she said.
Ms Fitzgerald said that Zionism “does not equally acknowledge the rights of other native populations” and that Mr Tayeh was advocating for the “liberation of Palestinians”.
The court was told that the expert report explicitly states Palestinian resistance to Zionism has included “political protest, political violence, and terrorism”. Ms Fitzgerald identified her client as a member of this “political family”, arguing his rhetoric was a legitimate extension of historical struggle.
Police prosecutors, however, are fighting to keep the history out of the witness box. They argued the case is not a defamation trial and that branding an entire political movement as “terrorists” is an absolute, discriminatory slur. They contended that Australians do not require a history lesson to find the language insulting and that the report is an “excursive exercise” into Middle Eastern affairs that distracts from the law.
The hearing on the admissibility of evidence follows a major concession by Victoria Police to abandon claims that Mr Tayeh was motivated by antisemitism.
As revealed by The Australian, the prosecution has now pivoted to a narrow argument focused solely on whether his words violated the Summary Offences Act as “insulting words” in a public place. They argue that calling a group “terrorists” is inherently insulting.
Magistrate Thomas indicated he would likely reject some evidence of the expert report, such as findings by the International Court of Justice that it was “plausible” Israel was committing genocide, because those events occurred after the alleged offences.
He stated he must put those recent findings “completely and utterly to one side” when judging what was in Mr Tayeh’s mind at the time of the rallies.
If proven, the offenses carry a maximum penalty of six months in prison. Mr Tayeh and his co-accused, Kunafa chef Jad Awwad Abu Alsendyan, remain at the center of the case which tests the limits of Victoria’s 1966 offensive language laws.
The court will now wait for Friday, when Magistrate Thomas is expected to hand down his final ruling on whether the expert’s historical analysis will be allowed as a defence.
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation/victoria/police-barred-from-using-intifada-chant-footage-in-hash-tayeh-prosecution/news-story/2bb54514177b9ce087dbb674abceea31
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d0bc64 No.24603593
>>24459199 (pb)
More charges for Perth man accused of mass terror attack plan
Aaron Bunch - May 13, 2026
A man accused of plotting a mass casualty terror attack targeting public buildings and places of worship has been hit with a slew of new charges, including possession of child abuse material.
Jayson Joseph Michaels detailed his alleged plan for a violent assault on WA police headquarters, WA Parliament House and mosques in a diary, believing it would be worse than the Bondi Beach mass shootings.
The 20-year-old initially faced five charges, including acting in preparation for a terrorist act, after police seized the diary during a raid on his parents' home in the town of Bindoon, north of Perth, in February.
But today, Stirling Magistrates Court in Perth heard he had been charged with the six new offences.
These were possession of a bulletproof vest, two counts of possession of violent extremist material on electronic devices, two counts of possession of objectionable material related to computer games, and possession of child abuse material.
Michaels, who appeared via video-link from Casuarina Prison, confirmed he understood the charges and wasn't required to enter a plea.
He was remanded in custody to reappear in the same court on July 8.
Michaels' original charges also include three firearms and ammunition charges and one count of allegedly using a carriage service to menace, harass or cause offence.
His diary allegedly contained entries that amounted to a list of actions he planned to undertake, including making weapons and body armour for a "day of justice," prosecutors have previously told the court.
Michaels allegedly planned to buy a 3D printer to make a gun and got a job where he could access bomb-making materials, but left empty-handed after one day.
He also compared the Bondi Beach attack to his own terror plot and wrote notes about how it might impact it, Commonwealth prosecutor Kirsten Nelson told a failed bail application hearing in April.
"What I want to do to both these groups pales in comparison to today," he allegedly wrote after the December 14 shootings that killed 15 and injured many more.
"What will they all think when my face is on TV?" he wrote.
Michaels allegedly accessed online material about extremist white supremacist ideology, some of which was described as a manifesto and instruction manual from a declared terrorist organisation.
He wrote about researching entry points and door locks at his target locations and considered using a van that looked like an ambulance to make his escape.
He also allegedly penned a note about buying a ballistic helmet, designing and building body armour or an Iron Man-style metal suit.
"I think I'm addicted to the (Watch People Die) website," he wrote in another diary entry.
The website was open on his computer when police burst into his bedroom, allegedly finding two guns, 900 rounds of ammunition and various knives.
The court has previously heard that Michaels was an isolated and depressed young man who had no intention to carry out the plan.
https://www.9news.com.au/national/jayson-joseph-michaels-court-updates-more-charges-for-man-accused-of-mass-terror-attack-plan/ad01053d-0e42-4bb5-8b6b-b3a3c72bf94a
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d0bc64 No.24610615
YouTube embed. Click thumbnail to play.
>>24579072 (pb)
Sall Grover loses landmark appeal on women’s spaces against Roxanne Tickle
STEPHEN RICE - 15 May 2026
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Giggle for Girls founder Sall Grover has lost her appeal in her case against transwoman Roxanne Tickle, with the Federal Court finding that she directly discriminated against Ms Tickle by rejecting her from the female-only networking app because she appeared to be a man.
On Friday, the Full Court of the Federal Court ordered that a decision by judge Robert Bromwich that Ms Grover indirectly discriminated against Ms Tickle be set aside and instead found unlawful direct discrimination on the basis of Ms Tickle’s “gender identity”.
Justices Melissa Perry, Wendy Abraham and Geoffrey Kennett awarded Ms Tickle $20,000 damages, doubling the original award, “taking into account aggravating conduct by Ms Grover”.
Ms Grover will also have to pay Ms Tickle’s legal costs up to an amount of $100,000 overall.
The landmark decision was delivered by Justice Perry and streamed live on the court’s YouTube channel.
The Full Court found that Ms Grover “excluded Ms Tickle from the Giggle app and refused to readmit her on the basis of her gender-related appearance by reference to her selfie, and this amounted to direct discrimination by reference to a characteristic that pertains to people of Ms Tickle’s gender identity, being transgender women”.
The court found that under the Sex Discrimination Act, “gender identity” broadly includes a person’s gender-related appearance and outward social markers, not just their internal sense of self.
During the proceedings, Ms Grover argued that sex is a purely biological, binary concept fixed at birth, and asserted that their app was a lawful “special measure” designed to achieve substantive equality between men and women.
The Full Court rejected this, ruling that taking a special measure to promote equality for one protected group does not provide a legal shield to expressly disadvantage another marginalised group, such as transgender women
Ms Grover has stated in the past that she would seek to appeal the case to the High Court if the Federal Court found against her.
After the appeal decision was handed down Ms Grover posted on social media that she was “absolutely devastated”.
“Men who claim to be women have more rights than actual women in Australia,” she said.
“It is women who are being discriminated against, not the men who claim to be us. But in a sense, nothing has changed: we will all wake up tomorrow & men will still not be women.”
(continued)
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d0bc64 No.24610619
>>24610615
2/2
Delivering the appeal verdict, Justice Perry said: “While this proceeding involved issues on which there are differing views within the community, it is important to emphasise that the questions for determination by the court involved the construction and application of provisions of the Sex Discrimination Act. The court has interpreted that act in accordance with normal principles of statutory construction. The court is not empowered to give effect to its own view about the desirability or otherwise of that law,” Justice Perry said.
In his 2024 ruling, Justice Bromwich found that “sex is changeable” and non-binary, saying the “concept of sex has broadened over the 30 years since the Sex Discrimination Act”.
The case was the first time gender identity discrimination had been examined by the Federal Court following changes to the Sex Discrimination Act in 2013 that made it unlawful to discriminate against a person on the basis of sexual orientation, gender identity or intersex status.
Justice Bromwich found that Ms Grover had indirectly, but not directly, discriminated against Ms Tickle when she removed her from the app because she did not look sufficiently female.
He awarded $10,000 damages against Ms Grover because she laughed in court at a satirical piece of merchandise – a scented candle – that appeared to mock Ms Tickle.
On appeal, Ms Grover’s lawyers said Justice Bromwich failed to consider the broader context of the Sex Discrimination Act, arguing the Giggle app’s female-only policy was a special measure intended to address the unique disadvantages faced by women in digital spaces, and thus should not be considered discriminatory.
Ms Grover said her own experience of sexual abuse and trauma recovery underscored for her the importance of female-only support environments and led directly to the app’s creation.
Equality Australia argued in support of Ms Tickle that “sex” is not confined to a biological concept, instead having a broader meaning that includes aspects of social recognition and personal identification.
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation/sall-grover-loses-landmark-appeal-on-womens-spaces-against-roxanne-tickle/news-story/0d3f3b82833a4ea66797969193428643
https://www.reuters.com/legal/government/australian-court-upholds-ruling-transgender-woman-doubles-damages-against-female-2026-05-15/
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TYRiDgsN-GU
https://www.fedcourt.gov.au/services/access-to-files-and-transcripts/online-files/giggle-for-girls-v-roxanne-tickle
https://www.judgments.fedcourt.gov.au/judgments/Judgments/fca/full/2026/2026fcafc0064
https://qresear.ch/?q=Sall+Grover
https://qresear.ch/?q=Roxanne+Tickle
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d0bc64 No.24610625
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>>24610615
Damages doubled after trans woman’s landmark discrimination win
Michaela Whitbourn - May 15, 2026
1/2
A transgender woman who won a landmark discrimination suit after she was excluded from a social media app marketed as a “women-only safe space” has had her victory increased by an appeal court and her damages doubled.
Roxanne Tickle took the company behind the app, Giggle for Girls, and its founder, Sall Grover, to the Federal Court in 2022, alleging they breached Commonwealth discrimination laws.
The court ruled in Tickle’s favour in 2024 and ordered the company and Grover to pay Tickle $10,000 in compensation plus legal costs.
Grover and the company lodged an appeal. In a cross-appeal, Tickle asked the court to find the discrimination against her was direct, rather than indirect, and to increase the damages.
In a decision on Friday, the Full Court of the Federal Court dismissed the appeal and upheld Tickle’s cross-appeal.
Justices Melissa Perry, Wendy Abraham and Geoffrey Kennett found Giggle and Grover had excluded Tickle on the basis of her gender-related appearance, and this amounted to direct discrimination on the ground of her gender identity. The court increased her damages to $20,000.
The court said some of Grover’s conduct in the case, such as repeatedly misgendering Tickle, was “gratuitous, disrespectful and unnecessary” and “aggravated the hurt suffered” by her.
“It did not advance her defence,” the court said.
In a statement after the decision, Tickle said: “I brought my case to show trans people that you can be brave and that you can stand up for yourself.
“In the process, I surprised myself at just how brave I could be. Young Roxy would be surprised but overjoyed.”
She said there was “so much hate and bile cast on trans and gender diverse people, simply because of who we are”, and it was usually “by those who refuse to meet us or engage with us”.
Grover said in a statement that she was “absolutely devastated” by the decision, and it was “women who are being discriminated against”.
Under the Sex Discrimination Act, it is unlawful for providers of goods and services to discriminate against another person on the ground of the other person’s gender identity. Some exemptions are available.
Tickle, who was assigned male at birth, had gender-affirming surgery after 2017. Her birth certificate records her sex as female.
In his 2024 decision, Federal Court Judge Robert Bromwich found Tickle was excluded from the app because Grover reviewed Tickle’s “selfie”, which had been uploaded when she registered for the app, and concluded she was male.
The judge concluded it was most likely Grover did not know Tickle was a transgender woman “and instead excluded her on the quick or reflexive decision that she appeared to Ms Grover to be a male”.
He said Giggle for Girls and Grover indirectly discriminated against Tickle by imposing a condition that she must “have the appearance of a cisgender woman”, meaning a woman whose gender corresponds to the sex registered for her at birth.
(continued)
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d0bc64 No.24610631
>>24610625
2/2
But the appeal court said the discrimination in this case was direct. It found she was treated less favourably than a cisgender woman, on the basis of her gender-related appearance.
Grover confirmed during her evidence in court that she regarded transgender women as “male”.
She described her vision for the app in written evidence as “a little corner of the internet where women from all over the world could have a refuge away from men”.
“It would be a place without harassment, ‘mansplaining’, ‘dick pics’, stalking, and aggression, and other male patterned online behaviour.” The app was taken offline in 2022.
The court heard Tickle downloaded the Giggle app in early 2021. The registration process included uploading a selfie, the court heard. AI software accepted the photo, and Tickle gained access to the app.
Later that year, however, Tickle’s use of the app was restricted, and she was blocked from purchasing premium features.
Bromwich in 2024 said it was “not my role … to have regard to the evolutionary or biological definitions or features of human sex”.
“That is because … the legal definition of a woman (or man) is not so confined,” he said.
“Ms Tickle is a legal female, as reflected in her updated birth certificate. The discrimination complained of by Ms Tickle is on the basis of gender identity and not sex.”
Monash University Professor Paula Gerber, a human rights law expert, said the decision “affirms that Australia has strong legislation that protects trans people from discrimination on the basis of their gender identity” and Australia was not “at risk of following the path the UK has gone down”.
In a ruling last year, the UK’s highest court said the terms “woman” and “sex” in equality legislation referred to “biological sex”. However, the issues canvassed in that case were different to the dispute over the Giggle app.
https://www.theage.com.au/national/nsw/damages-doubled-after-trans-woman-s-landmark-discrimination-win-20260514-p5zx14.html
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dg2ydD1RwLY
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ba863e No.24610668
>>24610631
>It found she was treated less favourably than a cisgender woman
"She" was treated as a M A L E.
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ba863e No.24610705
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d0bc64 No.24610801
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>>24610615
Court upholds discrimination ruling on appeal after transgender woman excluded from Giggle for Girls app
Jamie McKinnell - 15 May 2026
1/2
A landmark Federal Court ruling that the exclusion of a transgender woman from a female-only app constituted gender identity discrimination has been upheld on appeal.
In August 2024, Roxanne Tickle was awarded $10,000 in compensation plus court costs in a case against the Giggle for Girls app and its chief executive officer, Sall Grover.
Ms Tickle accessed the social networking platform in 2021 after submitting a selfie which was assessed by artificial intelligence software designed to distinguish between the facial appearance of men and women.
But her account was later restricted following a manual review.
Justice Robert Bromwich previously found there was indirect gender identity discrimination due to "the imposed condition of needing to appear to be a cisgendered female", which had the effect of "disadvantaging transgender women who did not meet that condition".
A claim of direct discrimination failed because it was not established that Ms Grover was aware of Ms Tickle's gender identity when Ms Tickle was blocked.
It was the first case to claim discrimination on the basis of gender identity since changes to the Sex Discrimination Act in 2013.
During an appeal hearing last year, Ms Grover sought to overturn the ruling, while Ms Tickle launched a cross-appeal which aimed to strengthen it through a finding of direct discrimination and an increase in the damages to $40,000.
More damages awarded
The full court of the Federal Court — comprised of Justices Melissa Perry, Wendy Abraham and Geoffrey Kennett — on Friday found there were two instances of direct discrimination against Ms Tickle.
That included when Giggle and Ms Grover refused to re-admit Ms Tickle.
The court has reassessed damages and awarded $20,000 plus limited court costs.
In the full judgement, the appeal panel said the case raised issues on which there were differing views in the community.
"It is important to emphasise that the issues for determination by the court involve the construction and application of provisions of the (Sex Discrimination Act)," they said.
"The desirability or otherwise of that law is not a matter open to this court to consider."
The judgement emphasised the case concerned "one form only of discrimination covered by the SDA, and with circumstances in which it has not been argued that any of the general exemptions under that Act apply."
Ms Grover left the Federal Court without making any comment but later said on social media she was "absolutely devastated" and "it is women who are being discriminated against".
Speaking outside court, Ms Tickle said she hoped the outcome “assists trans and gender diverse people and their loved ones to heal".
"I submitted my discrimination complaint against Giggle for Girls and its CEO Ms Grover to the Australian Human Rights Commission in December 2021, seeking justice for the discrimination that has since stolen over four of my eight years since I began my gender affirmation," she said.
"I now look forward to getting on with the rest of my life in the community we all know and love. One that embraces freedom and equality for all women."
(continued)
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d0bc64 No.24610809
>>24610801
2/2
Ms Tickle has lived as a woman since about mid-2017, had her birth certificate reissued with a female sex marker and has undergone gender-affirming surgery, the court previously heard.
Justice Bromwich said Ms Grover's argument that sex referred to a person's sex at birth conflicted with a "long history" of court decisions going back three decades which "establish that in its ordinary meaning, sex is changeable".
Ms Grover's lawyers had attempted to invoke a carve out of discrimination law which exempts measures designed to achieve substantive equality between men and women, but that contention failed.
The appeal judges found the primary judge was correct in his decision in relation to the special measures argument.
The court heard the Giggle app was created to be a digital refuge for women and facilitate access to peer support, advice and community.
During the appeal, Ms Grover's lawyers argued in written submissions that the reference to "cisgendered" in the imposed condition to use the app was a term not grounded in any evidence.
They argued Justice Bromwich had not identified a group which was disadvantaged by the condition, and his reasoning "impermissibly inferred group-based discrimination from an individual outcome".
Ms Tickle's lawyers said the original decision should have included a finding of direct discrimination, including through the refusal to re-admit her to the app.
They said the compensation sum was affected by legal error, in part because inadequate weight was given to the "significant, upsetting, exhausting and draining" impact of the discrimination on their client, and with regard to the prevailing community standards.
'Gratuitous, disrespectful' conduct
Ms Tickle's lawyers sought $30,000 in general damages and at least $10,000 in aggravated damages.
They said the judge made an error by only making a finding of "some limited degree of harm" from Ms Grover's conduct during the trial, after she laughed at an offensive caricature of Ms Tickle while under cross-examination.
They argued that as part of aggravated damages, the court should have recognised harm arising from comments Ms Grover has made in public forums about transgender women, her refusal to reinstate Ms Tickle's account on the app, and her encouragement of the sale of degrading merchandise to make money to defend the case.
In the appeal judgement, the judges said conducting a defence did not require Ms Grover to refer to Ms Tickle using male pronouns in court.
"Some of her conduct was gratuitous, disrespectful and unnecessary to the conduct of her case. It did not advance her defence," they said.
The court said the discrimination went to Ms Tickle's "inherent sense of self and identity" and the loss of access to the app may be "modest", but the basis for her exclusion was hurtful.
The appeal judges accepted there was aggravating conduct and said there were aspects of Ms Grover's public commentary that were "gratuitous to the proceedings", accepting that Ms Tickle suffered additional harm as a result.
The full court awarded general damages of $12,000 and aggravated damages of $8,000.
https://www.abc.net.au/news/2026-05-15/nsw-tickle-v-giggle-judgement-transgender-woman/106682498
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PZBPA49hZhk
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d0bc64 No.24610926
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>>24610615
Giggle v Tickle: Federal Court dismisses appeal in landmark 'What is a woman' case
The Federal Court has dismissed the appeal of the Giggle v Tickle "what is a woman" ruling in a landmark judgement, laying the ground for an appeal to the High Court.
Max Aldred - May 15, 2026
1/2
The Federal Court has dismissed the appeal of the Giggle v Tickle "what is a woman" ruling in a landmark judgement.
The Full Court upheld the ruling on sex and gender identity under the Sex Discrimination Act, arising from an appeal by Giggle for Girls founder Sall Grover on Friday.
Transgender woman Roxanne Tickle first sued Ms Grover after she was barred from the women-only app in 2021.
Justice Melissa Perry, Justice Wendy Abraham and Justice Geoffrey Kennett on Friday ruled Ms Grover’s appeal be dismissed, and Ms Tickle’s cross-appeal be allowed.
Shortly after the judgement was handed down, Ms Grover said she was "absolutely devastated".
“Men who claim to be women have more rights than actual women in Australia,” she said.
“It is women who are being discriminated against, not the men who claim to be us.
“But in a sense, nothing has changed: we will all wake up tomorrow & men will still not be women.”
Ms Tickle's cross-appeal centred on the Federal Court's ruling that Ms Grover and Giggle for Girls had "indirectly" discriminated against her.
It sought declaration that Ms Grover and her app had engaged instead in "direct" discrimination as well as a larger award of damages.
She was successful in that appeal on Friday, and the court awarded her $20,000 in damages “taking into account aggravating conduct” by Ms Grover.
“Gender identity is defined as meaning gender-related identity and gender-related characteristics, including appearance,” Justice Perry told the court.
“The full Court found that:
"A) Giggle and Miss Grover both excluded Miss Tickle from the Giggle app and refused to readmit her on the basis of her gender-related appearance by reference to her selfie; and
"B) this amounted to direct discrimination by reference to a characteristic that pertains to people of Ms. Tickles' gender identity being transgender women.”
The Federal Court has dismissed the appeal of the Giggle v Tickle "what is a woman" ruling in a landmark judgement.
The Full Court upheld the ruling on sex and gender identity under the Sex Discrimination Act, arising from an appeal by Giggle for Girls founder Sall Grover on Friday.
Transgender woman Roxanne Tickle first sued Ms Grover after she was barred from the women-only app in 2021.
Justice Melissa Perry, Justice Wendy Abraham and Justice Geoffrey Kennett on Friday ruled Ms Grover’s appeal be dismissed, and Ms Tickle’s cross-appeal be allowed.
Shortly after the judgement was handed down, Ms Grover said she was "absolutely devastated".
“Men who claim to be women have more rights than actual women in Australia,” she said.
“It is women who are being discriminated against, not the men who claim to be us.
“But in a sense, nothing has changed: we will all wake up tomorrow & men will still not be women.”
Ms Tickle's cross-appeal centred on the Federal Court's ruling that Ms Grover and Giggle for Girls had "indirectly" discriminated against her.
It sought declaration that Ms Grover and her app had engaged instead in "direct" discrimination as well as a larger award of damages.
She was successful in that appeal on Friday, and the court awarded her $20,000 in damages “taking into account aggravating conduct” by Ms Grover.
“Gender identity is defined as meaning gender-related identity and gender-related characteristics, including appearance,” Justice Perry told the court.
“The full Court found that:
"A) Giggle and Miss Grover both excluded Miss Tickle from the Giggle app and refused to readmit her on the basis of her gender-related appearance by reference to her selfie; and
"B) this amounted to direct discrimination by reference to a characteristic that pertains to people of Ms. Tickles' gender identity being transgender women.”
(continued)
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d0bc64 No.24610929
>>24610926
2/2
The judgement now lays the groundwork for a second appeal, with Ms Grover telling Sky News on Thursday that she would take the case to the High Court.
“I would like … there to be legislators that stepped in actually did their job and fixed because they could fix this for free in a week,” she said.
“But if I have to go to the High Court, I will.”
One Nation leader Pauline Hanson said the ruling was a "sad day for upholding biological reality in Australia".
The Federal Court in 2024 found Ms Grover had indirectly and unlawfully discriminated against Ms Tickle.
It established “sex” was changeable, finding laws protecting against discrimination on the basis of gender identity were constitutionally valid.
Ms Grover subsequently filed an appeal in the Federal Court.
Friday’s judgement supported the existing understanding of “sex”, under the Sex Discrimination Act, as mutable.
“While this proceeding involved issues on which there are differing views within the community, it is important to emphasize that the questions for determination by the court involved the construction and application of provisions of the Sex Discrimination Act,” Justice Perry told the Court.
“The court has interpreted that Act in accordance with normal principles of statutory construction.
“The court is not empowered to give effect to its own view about the desirability or otherwise of that law. "
Before attempting to join Ms Grover's app, Ms Tickle had undergone sexual reassignment surgery and was issued an updated Queensland birth certificate recording her sex as female, the justices noted.
Ms Tickle had found support from the Sex Discrimination Commissioner Anna Cody over the course of the case.
Ms Grover was supported by several women’s groups and gay and lesbian groups.
In the 2024 finding, Justice Robert Bromwich found Ms Grover had indirectly discriminated against Ms Tickle by removing her from the Giggle for Girls app.
During a cross examination ahead of the 2024 judgement, Ms Grover agreed she had removed Ms Tickle from her app upon examining the applicant's photograph and deciding she was not a woman.
“Ms Grover could not recall removing Ms Tickle specifically, but stated that it was her practice to review users’ onboarding selfies and block anyone who appeared male to her,” the 2024 judgement read.
Ms Tickle also appealed parts of that decision, asking for indirect discrimination to be escalated to a finding of direct discrimination – with damages increased to $40,000.
Her lawyers also wanted Ms Grover to pay further damages for allegedly misgendering their client in the media.
Ms Grover had not changed her position on the matter over the course of the case.
She characterised her fight as “reality versus ideology”, with Sky News on Thursday.
“I went into a reality versus ideology fight with facts and reality and I think we’ve done the absolute best that we can do,” she said.
“I would be significantly more nervous if I was trying to argue that men could be women. I think that’s a hard fight to win.”
Ms Tickle had originally sought damages amounting to $200,000 claiming the “persistent misgendering” allegedly perpetrated by Ms Grover had caused her anxiety and occasional suicidal thoughts.
“Grover’s public statements about me and this case have been distressing, demoralising, embarrassing, draining and hurtful. This has led to individuals posting hateful comments towards me online and indirectly inciting others to do the same,” Ms Tickle said in an affidavit.
https://www.skynews.com.au/australia-news/politics/giggle-v-tickle-what-is-a-woman-judgement-set-to-be-handed-down/news-story/1896809773690c597c92df2ff640ad4d
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TTX8M8gVRJs
https://x.com/salltweets/status/2055148531376377974
https://x.com/salltweets/status/2055200943009083881
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d0bc64 No.24611015
>>24610615
Pauline Hanson vows to defend female-only app founder after landmark transgender discrimination appeal
Pauline Hanson has weighed in on a landmark court ruling, after an app founder once backed by JK Rowling was ordered to pay double for discriminating against a transgender user.
Kate Stephenson and Nathan Schmidt - May 16, 2026
1/2
Pauline Hanson has vowed to back a woman found by a court to have discriminated against a transgender woman when she was removed from a female-only networking app.
The Full Court of the Federal Court has ruled in favour of transgender woman Roxanne Tickle, finding female-only app founder Sall Grover directly discriminated against her twice when she chose to remove Ms Tickle from the networking app.
In August 2024, Ms Grover was ordered to pay $10,000 in damages after the Federal Court found she indirectly discriminated against Ms Tickle when she removed Ms Tickle from the app Giggles for Girls, designed to be a “safe, online space exclusively for women”.
Ms Tickle was originally given access to the app after an AI software test designed to filter out male users cleared her.
However, Ms Grover personally removed her after seeing her profile in 2021.
Despite her attempts to be readmitted to the app, Ms Tickle was denied by Ms Grover.
Taking to X, Ms Grover said she was “absolutely devastated”.
One Nation leader Pauline Hanson said she was “disgusted” by the court's decision.
“I will back Sall Grover in parliament,” she wrote.
Friday’s result was disappointing for many “fighting for biological rights of women”, opposition spokesperson for women Melissa McIntosh said.
“The issue is the Sex Discrimination Act,” she said on X.
“It is time for a review of the Sex Discrimination Act. Our laws should be working for Australian women, not against them.”
Both Senator Hanson and Ms McIntosh were quick to claim their parties had attempted to amend the Act.
The Australian Human Rights Commission welcomed the court’s decision.
Sex Discrimination Commissioner Dr Anna Cody, who assisted in the appeal on an amicus basis, said the case had “prompted significant discussion about how our discrimination laws apply in practice”.
“The Sex Discrimination Act is intended to ensure all people are treated equally and can participate fully in public life. These protections extend to all women, including transgender women,” Dr Cody said.
Commission President Hugh de Krester said many people still faced discrimination.
“We welcome the Federal Court’s interpretation of this protection in its decision,” he said.
Equality Australia legal director Heather Corkhill said Friday’s decision affirmed trans Australian rights.
“This ruling affirms that all women deserve to live free from discrimination, without being judged on appearance, presentation or perceptions,” she said.
“For decades, Australian laws have recognised that a person’s legal sex is not limited to the sex they were assigned at birth – any other interpretation would deny the reality and existence of trans people.
“The judgment reinforces that anti-discrimination laws are intended to protect everyone, particularly groups such as trans women who often experience exclusion and disadvantage.”
(continued)
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d0bc64 No.24611020
>>24611015
2/2
Court appeal
At the original hearing in 2024, Federal Court Justice Robert Bromwich found Ms Grover had excluded Ms Tickle for not looking “sufficiently female”, and therefore indirectly discriminated against her.
Ms Grover filed an appeal against the decision in October 2024, which was heard in August last year before justices Melissa Perry, Geoffrey Kennett and Wendy Abraham.
In her appeal Ms Grover argued sex, under the Sex Discrimination Act, was “binary and immutable”, with Ms Tickle positing sex was instead non-binary and changeable.
Ms Grover argued Justice Bromwich failed to consider the broader context of the Sex Discrimination Act, claiming the Giggle app female-only policy addressed disadvantages uniquely felt by women in the digital world and was therefore not discriminatory.
Ms Tickle also appealed parts of the 2024 ruling, seeking a finding of direct discrimination, rather than indirect discrimination, on two accounts and an increase of damages to at least $40,000.
She said Ms Grover had repeatedly misgendered her in the media, causing significant distress.
Ms Tickle’s case was supported in court by Sex Discrimination commissioner Anna Cody and endorsed by the Australian Human Rights Commission and LGBTQI+ group Equality Australia.
Ms Grover’s case was crowd-funded, with support from the Lesbian Action Group who are currently fighting for the legal right to exclude transgender women from their events.
On Friday, Justice Melissa Perry delivered the Full Court’s judgment.
Justice Perry set aside Justice Bromwich’s original decision, ruling instead that Ms Grover had directly discriminated against Ms Tickle on the basis of her “gender-related appearance” on two occasions – when Ms Grover initially removed Ms Tickle from the app, and when she refused to reinstate her upon Ms Tickle’s request.
On behalf of the court, Justice Perry said Ms Grover had treated Ms Tickle “less favourably” than a biological woman.
She said whether the app was designed with “the purpose of achieving equality between men and women” was unimportant to the decision of whether it was discriminatory to Ms Tickle.
Ms Grover and the Giggle App were ordered to pay a higher total of $20,000 in damages to Ms Tickle alongside court costs for the appeal and Ms Tickle’s cross appeal up to $50,000.
The damages were ordered to be paid within 60 days.
Ahead of the appeal in 2025, Harry Potter author JK Rowling gave support for Ms Grover.
“Good luck, Sall, may the best woman (haha) win x” the author posted on X.
Ms Rowling has been criticised for her opinions on transgender women which have been linked to the Transgender Exclusionary Radical Feminist (TERF) fringe movement.
She has zealously campaigned against transgender rights in the UK and has voiced support for anti-transgender actions in multiple countries.
In the 2024 proceedings, the court was told Ms Tickle had been presenting as a woman since 2017, undertaking gender-affirming care in the ensuing years.
Her birth certificate lists her as female, being reissued in 2020.
https://www.news.com.au/national/courts-law/femaleonly-app-founder-loses-landmark-transgender-discrimination-appeal/news-story/96c4b1e2fa1196dc45f611a945599333
https://x.com/PaulineHansonOz/status/2055140556289028233
https://x.com/PaulineHansonOz/status/2055152784492912953
https://x.com/PaulineHansonOz/status/2055186533398048897
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d0bc64 No.24611055
>>24610615
Australia court doubles payout for trans woman in landmark discrimination case
Lana Lam - 15 May 2026
A Sydney court has doubled the discrimination payout for an Australian trans woman who was kicked off a female-only app.
It comes almost two years after Roxanne Tickle successfully sued Sall Grover, founder of the Giggle for Girls app, for blocking her account on the grounds of gender identity.
Grover lodged an appeal against that verdict, but on Friday, the Federal Court dismissed it and further found that Tickle was directly - rather than indirectly - discriminated against by Grover.
Tickle, a biological male who identifies as a woman, was also awarded compensation of AU$20,000 ($14,000; £11,000), double the original amount.
Giggle's legal team argued throughout the original case that sex is a biological concept. They freely conceded that Tickle was discriminated against, but on the grounds of sex, rather than gender identity.
Known as "Tickle vs Giggle", the years-long dispute is the first time a case of alleged gender identity discrimination has been heard by the Federal Court in Australia.
During the original case, the court heard that Grover had removed Tickle from the app after spotting "male facial features" on Tickle's profile photo.
Grover told the court that when she looked at Tickle's profile picture, she decided Tickle was not a woman and removed the account, saying that the process was "the same as removing all males".
"I would have seen the photo and just gone, 'male', and blocked," Grover told the court during the initial hearing.
Under the country's Sex Discrimination Act, it is illegal for providers of goods or services to discriminate against another person on the ground of a person's gender identity.
In Friday's Federal Court judgement, the full court found that Grover had engaged in unlawful direct discrimination, saying she had treated Tickle "who is a transgender woman, less favourably than a person designated female at birth seeking access to the Giggle App".
The three judges also found that the original judge had erred by not deeming Tickle's removal from the app based on Grover's "first visual review" of the profile picture as direct discrimination.
The earlier ruling found that Grover had indirectly discriminated against Tickle.
Tickle downloaded the app in 2021 and passed the registration process which included a selfie, and used the app for about half a year before being blocked.
Grover founded the Giggle for Girls app in 2020 in response to online abuse by men during her time as a screenwriter in Hollywood.
"I wanted to create a safe, women-only space in the palm of your hand," she said earlier.
Shortly after Friday's ruling, Grover said she intended to appeal the decision in the High Court.
Update: This article has been amended to make clear Roxanne Tickle is a biological male who identifies as a woman.
https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cdjpzgppr7mo
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d0bc64 No.24611095
YouTube embed. Click thumbnail to play.
>>24579031 (pb)
>>24610615
‘Laughing stock of the world’: Giggle v Tickle discrimination case outcome stuns Women's Forum Australia CEO
Australia has been labelled the “laughing stock of the world” by a women’s rights advocate after the Federal Court dismissed the appeal of the Giggle v Tickle ruling.
Matt Hampson - May 16, 2026
1/2
A women’s rights advocate has labelled Australia the “laughing stock of the world” after a landmark ruling on sex and gender identity was upheld.
Giggle for Girls CEO Sall Grover has lost her appeal of a 2024 Federal Court decision that found she unlawfully discriminated against transgender woman Roxanne Tickle after barring her from the women-only platform.
Federal Court judges ruled that Ms Grover’s appeal be dismissed, and that Ms Tickle’s cross-appeal be allowed.
Speaking to Sky News Australia on Friday evening, Women's Forum Australia Chief Executive Rachael Wong said she was “still in shock” following the court’s decision.
“I don't think any of us thought that it was going to go this way. It's even worse than it was in the last instance,” Ms Wong said.
She described the outcome, which found that Giggle for Girls and Ms Grover had directly discriminated against Ms Tickle, as “unbelievable”.
“Australia is the laughing stock of the world right now,” Ms Wong said.
Despite Ms Grover having indicated she will take the case to the High Court, Ms Wong said “the reality is she shouldn't have to”.
“She shouldn't have had to have been spending the last four years of her life sacrificing her business, sacrificing time with her family to fight this absolute insanity,” Ms Wong said.
“Politicians could have stepped in and fixed this on day dot and they haven't.”
(continued)
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d0bc64 No.24611098
>>24611095
2/2
Ms Grover voiced her disappointment shortly after the Federal Court judgment, saying she was “absolutely devastated”.
“Men who claim to be women have more rights than actual women in Australia,” she wrote in a post on X.
“It is women who are being discriminated against, not the men who claim to be us.
“But in a sense, nothing has changed: we will all wake up tomorrow & men will still not be women.”
Meanwhile One Nation leader Pauline Hanson has said she was “disgusted” by the case outcome.
“It flies in the face of biological reality and strips rights from women,” she wrote in a statement posted to social media on Friday.
“I condemn this appalling decision and I commend Sall Grover for refusing to give up the fight on behalf of Australian women everywhere. I hope she takes this to the High Court and I wish her every success in doing so.”
It comes after the judgment from Justice Melissa Perry, Justice Wendy Abraham and Justice Geoffrey Kennett on the Giggle v Tickle case was handed down on Friday afternoon.
Ms Tickle's successful cross-appeal centred on the Federal Court's ruling that Ms Grover and Giggle for Girls had "indirectly" discriminated against her.
It sought declaration that Ms Grover and her app had engaged instead in "direct" discrimination as well as a larger award of damages.
The court awarded Ms Tickle $20,000 in damages “taking into account aggravating conduct” by Ms Grover.
“Gender identity is defined as meaning gender-related identity and gender-related characteristics, including appearance,” Justice Perry told the court.
https://www.skynews.com.au/australia-news/politics/laughing-stock-of-the-world-giggle-v-tickle-discrimination-case-outcome-stuns-womens-forum-australia-ceo/news-story/869fb5ff05bd3d59e0eaa5f38d72b250
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vUxgJOiaSUc
https://x.com/salltweets/status/2055483094883570078
https://www.gbnews.com/news/world/giggle-v-tickle-appeal-australia-trans-woman-ban-girls-only-app-roxanne-tickle-sall-grover
https://qresear.ch/?q=Rachael+Wong
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d0bc64 No.24611200
>>24610615
Analysis: Giggle for Girls founder Sall Grover loses case against transwoman Roxanne Tickle
Sall Grover after appeal loss: ‘You cannot take our protections to get yours’
STEPHEN RICE - 15 May 2026
Don’t let the seemingly frivolous title of this case – Giggle v Tickle – distract from the serious implications of Friday’s Federal Court decision.
The right to access a women-only app called Giggle for Girls sounds harmless enough, but the appeal court’s determination means women no longer have the right to gather in their own spaces without the presence of biological men.
The Federal Court has chosen gender ideology over biological reality.
It didn’t need to.
The Sex Discrimination Act was designed to promote equality between men and women – if necessary, by allowing “special measures” that might discriminate against men but help women.
There was always a recognition that giving rights to one person might infringe on those of another.
When parliament passed poorly drafted amendments to the act in 2013 giving protections for “gender identity”, it clearly never intended that biological boys would sleep in girls’ dormitories, or that biological men would be locked into prison cells overnight with vulnerable women.
There is nothing, even now, in the omnishambles legislation that required the Federal Court to give gender identity precedence over sex.
The judges did that all by themselves.
Sex-based protections designed to protect women can now be employed by biological men who identify as women to ride roughshod over women who refuse to comply with their demands.
Sall Grover, who has fought this case for more than four years, has actively supported trans people having their own spaces, their own clubs, their own sporting events.
“We’re not opposing other people having protections that they need, but you cannot take away our protections to get yours,” she says. “That’s not how human rights work.”
Alas, that is now how human rights law works in Australia.
We need to catch up with the rest of the world.
The UK Supreme Court ruled a year ago that sex and gender identity are not the same, and that sex-based rights must be protected.
Yet we’re now in an even more invidious position than before Grover’s appeal.
Justice Bromwich had originally found that Grover only indirectly discriminated against Roxanne Tickle, because she didn’t know she was dealing with a transgender woman – she just saw someone who looked like a man.
The appeal judges have said that doesn’t matter. You can be directly discriminating against someone because of their male appearance, according to the Full Court, because male appearance is a gender-related characteristic of transgender women.
You might have thought male appearance was, well, because someone was born male.
After this judgment, if someone who looks like a man but identifies as a transgender woman goes into a women’s toilet, it is illegal to challenge or exclude them.
Grover says the damages awarded against her are punitive. It’s hard to disagree.
The appeal court awarded aggravated damages to Tickle because of Grover’s “gratuitous” and “disrespectful” conduct in “misgendering” Tickle during the trial.
That is, Grover stated her sincerely held belief, in a court of law, that a man cannot be a woman.
It cost her $20,000.
The one-time scriptwriter has already paid a high price for taking on a battle that should have been fought by those entrusted with protecting women. Many women gave evidence in the proceedings that they needed their own spaces because of past experiences of sexual assaults and intimidation by men.
Grover was one of those women.
In the face of this evidence, the Australian Human Rights Commission and its Sex Discrimination Commissioner backed the right of a biological male who identifies as a woman to insist on being admitted to a space established for women.
Grover was 14 weeks pregnant when this saga began. Her daughter is now four. But Grover says she’s determined to do whatever it takes to ensure her daughter has the rights so many women have fought for.
“I want every woman and girl to be able to say “no” to a man, no matter how he identifies, and not be punished for it.”
It is past time for parliament to step in and deliver some basic commonsense.
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation/sall-grover-after-appeal-loss-you-cannot-take-our-protections-toget-yours/news-story/dc0ff15e105589e90cd956d78329e3fa
https://x.com/salltweets/status/2055427093933314399
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d0bc64 No.24611227
>>24610615
>>24611015
Angus Taylor vows to change sex discrimination laws after Tickle v Giggle court ruling
The Liberal leader has pledged sweeping legal changes after a transgender woman won her discrimination case against a women-only app founder.
Kate Stephenson - May 16, 2026
Liberal leader Angus Taylor has vowed to redesign Australia’s sex discrimination laws after a female app founder lost her appeal case against a transgender woman.
On Friday, the Full Court of the Federal Court ruled in favour of transgender woman Roxanne Tickle, finding female-only app founder Sall Grover directly discriminated against her when she chose to remove Ms Tickle from the networking app Giggles for Girls.
Ms Grover had brought an appeal to the court in 2025 following a ruling in the Federal Court the year prior which found she had indirectly discriminated against Ms Tickle and ordered she pay $10,000 in damages.
The Full Court set aside the original ruling, instead finding Ms Grover had directly discriminated against Ms Tickle on two occasions and ordered she now pay double the damages, increasing her dues to $20,000.
Ms Tickle was originally given access to the app after an AI software test designed to filter out male users cleared her.
However, Ms Grover personally removed her after seeing her profile in 2021.
On Saturday morning, Mr Taylor posted a statement to Facebook, claiming it would be his “first-term priority” to change existing sex discrimination laws.
“Yesterday the Full Federal Court confirmed that Australian law does not properly protect single sex spaces for women and girls,” he wrote.
“Most Australians would find that hard to believe. A coalition government I lead will fix this.
“We will amend the Sex Discrimination Act to ensure that women and girls (and men and boys) have protections based on biological sex.
“We will define biological sex in the act. Male or female. The sex you are born. And we will protect single-sex spaces across Australian life.”
Mr Taylor claimed the promise was not targeting transgender Australians.
“This is not radical. It is common sense,” he said.
“Let me be clear about what this is not. This is not about targeting transgender Australians.
“Every protection they currently have remains. We are not removing a single protection from anyone. But we are recognising something that should never have been in doubt: biological sex is real, it matters, and women and girls deserve spaces where it is respected.
“The Prime Minister now has a simple question to answer. Does he believe women and girls deserve protections based on biological sex?”
The court ruling has drawn both praise and criticism from politicians and advocacy groups alike.
The Australian Human Rights Commission welcomed the decision, with president Hugh de Krester stating many people still faced discrimination.
“We welcome the Federal Court’s interpretation of this protection in its decision,” he said following the verdict on Friday.
Equality Australia legal director Heather Corkhill said on Friday the decision affirmed the “reality and existence” of transgender Australians.
“This ruling affirms that all women deserve to live free from discrimination, without being judged on appearance, presentation or perceptions,” she said.
One Nation Senator Pauline Hanson posted to social media on Friday, stating she was “disgusted” by the ruling and promising to “back” Ms Grover in parliament.
https://www.news.com.au/national/politics/angus-taylor-vows-to-change-sex-discrimination-laws-after-tickle-v-giggle-court-ruling/news-story/01b3f5a95b0f1773a569fcabccc6541f
https://www.facebook.com/Angustaylor4hume/posts/1502783987894991
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d0bc64 No.24611309
YouTube embed. Click thumbnail to play.
>>24119741 (pb)
>>24354986 (pb)
>>24536485 (pb)
>>24576525 (pb)
Burke uses Bondi powers to outlaw neo-Nazi hate group
Matthew Knott - May 15, 2026
1/2
The neo-Nazi group formerly known as the National Socialist Network has been listed as a prohibited hate organisation by the Albanese government under legislation introduced after the Bondi massacre, prompting far-right activists to shut down and wipe records of their online chat groups.
It will now be a criminal offence, punishable by up to 15 years in prison, to join or provide support to the far-right group, which has gone by various names.
The group announced it would disband in January to avoid being targeted under the new laws, but authorities believed its members have still been active.
The government announced in March that Islamist group Hizb ut-Tahrir would be the first group to be banned under the hate group scheme, created to target groups that previously skirted the definition of a terror organisation.
Home Affairs Minister Tony Burke said he made the decision based on advice from domestic spy agency ASIO.
“Today, the organisation that would be colloquially known as the neo-Nazis, but has gone through different names – the European Australian Movement, the National Socialist Network (NSN) and White Australia – has been listed as the second prohibited hate group under the changes that were made to the Criminal Code,” Burke told reporters in Canberra.
“This sends a clear message to those who believe in racial supremacy that their views are not welcome in Australian society.”
The group organised an inflammatory rally outside NSW parliament last November in which participants held up a banner reading: “Abolish the Jewish lobby.”
After the Bondi terror attack on December 14, which led to the deaths of 15 people at a Hanukkah celebration, the government identified Hizb ut-Tahrir and the NSN as the two groups that showed the need for new hate group laws.
They typified behaviour that Burgess had identified as “lawful but awful”, Burke said on Friday.
“None of this will stop bigoted people from having ideas, but it does prevent this group from organising, from meeting, and prevents some of the sorts of horrific, bigoted rallies that we’ve seen around our country,” he said.
Burke said the government would be able to act quickly using regulation if the NSN tried to rebrand itself under another name.
Burgess said in a speech last year that the NSN had not engaged in terrorism but added: “I remain deeply concerned by its hateful, divisive rhetoric and increasingly violent propaganda, and the growing likelihood these things will prompt spontaneous violence, particularly in response to perceived provocation.”
(continued)
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d0bc64 No.24611443
>>24611309
2/2
Known neo-Nazis decried the new edict in online forums, railing against Burke, and warning “newbies” to throw out their NSN memorabilia. Some organisers of the March for Australia anti-immigration rallies, which this masthead has previously revealed work in partnership with the neo-Nazis, said they were seeking legal advice on the ruling.
A new Telegram channel set up by the NSN in recent weeks to further their propaganda efforts, called Australian Vanguard, said it would now shut down to escape the proscription laws. “We had a good run with this project,” they said, but “we’re going to have to shut it down.”
March for Australia lead organiser Bec Freedom announced that the group’s main Telegram chat would also be wiped and shut down before the midnight proscribing.
The leaders of the NSN announced in January: “To mitigate the risk of individuals being arrested and charged under these new draconian laws, we are shutting down all operations of the following organisations: the National Socialist Network; the European Australian Movement; White Australia; and the White Australia Party.”
Burke said this did not mean the group’s members no longer posed a threat.
“Effectively, what they did, for want of a better term, is phoenix,” he said, referring to a term in which insolvent companies reappear under a new guise.
Burke said while the group had “changed their name, they did not change the fact they were still an organisation and still engaged in the exact sort of behaviour that met the threshold for this legislation”.
Opposition home affairs spokesman Jonno Duniam praised the move, saying: “Australians do not want to see people avoid justice simply by tearing down a banner and re-emerging under a different name. This recommendation along with that of Hizb ut-Tahrir shows that the laws we backed in January of this year are responsible and effective.”
Executive Council of Australian Jewry co-chief executive Peter Wertheim applauded the decision, saying his organisation had been urging such a move since 2021.
Wertheim said the hate group listing would “send a much-needed message that these groups and their hateful, racist ideology have no place in Australia”.
“It doesn’t matter what they call themselves, or how they structure themselves, these groups use all the well-known techniques of thuggery and menace that Nazis have always used against Jewish communities and other groups they have targeted,” he said.
https://www.theage.com.au/politics/federal/government-lists-neo-nazi-group-as-hate-organisation-20260515-p5zxde.html
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xRUDqs_C9mY
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d0bc64 No.24611677
YouTube embed. Click thumbnail to play.
>>24611309
Neo-Nazi group banned in Australia under hate laws
Clare Armstrong - 15 May 2026
1/2
A Neo-Nazi organisation will be listed as a hate group in Australia, making it illegal to support the group in any way.
On Friday Home Affairs Minister Tony Burke announced that White Australia, previously known as the National Socialist Network (NSN) and the European Australian Movement, would be designated a prohibited hate group under laws introduced after the Bondi terror attack.
Mr Burke said the listing, effective as of midnight, meant "supporting, funding, training, recruiting, joining or directing" the group would be a criminal offence punishable by up to 15 years behind bars.
"It sends a clear message to people who believe in racial supremacy that their views have no place in modern Australia," he said.
Mr Burke linked Neo-Nazis to "violent action" in Melbourne and said there had been several arrests relating to people "motivated by white supremacist ideology".
South Australian police arrested 16 alleged Neo-Nazis, including one person who was charged with displaying a Nazi symbol, after they disrupted a Survival Day rally in Adelaide last January.
Three people were also arrested after a group of alleged Neo-Nazis attacked a First Nations protest camp in Melbourne in September.
Ban will limit 'horrific, bigoted rallies
Mr Burke said the federal government could not stop "bigoted people from having horrific ideologies," but banning certain groups would have an impact.
"It does prevent this group from organising, meeting and prevent some of the sorts of horrific, bigoted rallies we have seen around the country," he said.
Asked if Australians who continued to attend rallies organised by people linked to the banned group could be in breach of hate laws, Mr Burke said they would be taking a "risk" even if they did not realise who was behind the event.
"The criminal threshold will be determined on the facts, but the simple thing would be if anyone who associated with any organisation of this nature, they're taking a risk … and they need to be aware of the potential criminal offences that they'd be dealing with."
Mr Burke said the Neo-Nazis had "gone after almost every different group you can imagine" in Australia.
"Whether people are Jewish, Muslim, whether people are of Asian heritage, whether they are First Nations, they engaged in a series of examples of bigotry, all of which fit with their white supremacist ideology," he said.
"It has been made clear today that under Australian law they are now a banned organisation."
Executive Council of Australian Jewry co-chief executive Peter Wertheim welcomed the group's listing.
"It doesn't matter what they call themselves, or how they structure themselves, these groups use all the well-known techniques of thuggery and menace that Nazis have always used against Jewish communities and other groups they have targeted," he said in a statement.
"This announcement is welcome and will send a much-needed message that these groups and their hateful, racist ideology has no place in Australia."
(continued)
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d0bc64 No.24611689
>>24611677
2/2
Neo-Nazis can't avoid ban by changing name
When Labor first announced laws intended to capture groups described by intelligence agencies as "lawful but awful," the Neo-Nazi group known as NSN announced it would disband to avoid being listed as a hate group.
But Mr Burke said "phoenixing" — continuing the same activities under a different name — would be swiftly dealt with by the government.
"Once an organisation has been listed, then if they try to reform under a new name, effectively it's a simple regulation change [to list the new name]," he said.
Mr Burke said ASIO had initiated the listing on the basis the Neo-Nazi group was "engaged in behaviour that increase risks of violence".
The organisation also met the government's threshold of advocating for or engaging in "hate crimes".
Coalition backs listing of hate group
The opposition was briefed on the advice and has supported the listing, with Shadow Home Affairs Minister Jonno Duniam describing it as a "welcome development".
"Let's be absolutely clear, the modus operandi of these Neo-Nazis is to destroy the Australian way of life," he said.
"Our message to them is that your ideology of hate has no place in our society and that if your criminal organisation persists, it will be shut down and your members punished."
Senator Duniam said the ability to list the organisation as a hate group even if it changed names showed the hate laws backed by the Coalition in January were "responsible and effective".
The government has not been advised of any other groups that might be listed in the near future, with Mr Burke explaining the banning of any organisation was a "big step".
"We deliberately made sure we had a whole lot of checks and balances," he said.
https://www.abc.net.au/news/2026-05-15/neo-nazi-group-banned-in-australia-under-hate-laws/106686260
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uMDVbbMyABA
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d0bc64 No.24611729
>>24309785 (pb)
>>24603494
Jewish academics ‘targeted and silenced’ as universities face fines over antisemitism
NATASHA BITA - May 14, 2026
1/2
Universities face fines for failing to protect Jewish staff and students from hate speech and attacks, months after the Bondi massacre, a caustic review of antisemitism on campus has warned.
Jewish academics are being “targeted and silenced’’, sacked or boycotted, Emeritus Professor Greg Craven found in his government-initiated investigation of 32 universities. His damning report exposes ongoing intimidation and harassment of Jewish staff and students on campus – including academics “glorifying the leader of a proscribed terrorist organisation’’ to students.
Jewish students and staff have been verbally abused as “baby killers, defenders of genocide and fascists’’ while some student newspapers published Jewish tropes. “Though prohibited, chants such as ‘globalise the intifada’, ‘long live the intifada, ‘glory to the intifada’ and ‘from the river to the sea’ continue to be used … confronting flags are routinely flown on campus,’’ the report states.
“Jewish academics have needed to decide if they want to ‘come out’, identifying themselves as Jews, and in some cases have decided not to for fear of the consequences.
“Antisemitism is being directly used to repress the academic freedom of its victims.’’
Professor Craven – a constitutional lawyer and former vice-chancellor of the Australian Catholic University – lashed the university sector for failing to adopt clear and enforceable definitions of antisemitism – five months after 15 people were shot dead at a Jewish festival on Bondi Beach last December.
He deplored the “grave inability” of universities to stamp out antisemitism as a “sectoral failure’’, and questioned why they refused to treat hatred of Jews as seriously as discrimination on the grounds of race, gender, sexual orientation, disability or mental health. “Given the attacks at Bondi, on synagogues … as well as the direct harassment of Jewish people – including on university campuses – it surely is the case that antisemitism should take a detailed definitional place among other contemporary forms of harassment and vilification,’’ he said in his report on Thursday.
Criticising “arcane and almost unusable complaints and disciplinary processes’’ across higher education, Professor Craven found that university campuses had hosted aggressive protests and sit-ins featuring antisemitic slogans, offensive symbols, antisemitic guest speakers and “loud harassment of Jewish students and others seen as supporting the state of Israel or ‘Zionists’.’’
“It is implausible for universities to deny any significant level of blame here,’’ he said. “Antisemitism is a continuing and very serious problem within Australian universities. Not only is any degree of antisemitism in our universities racist, bigoted, unethical and immoral, it undermines their international viability as institutions of research and learning.
“As institutions of free debate and intellect they cannot allow themselves – or others connected with them – to be perceived as discriminating against a vulnerable and fearful minority.’’
Professor Craven said a continued failure by universities to define antisemitism and stamp it out should be referred to federal Education Minister Jason Clare.
He said consequences for individual universities might impact funding and registration through referrals to the Tertiary Education Quality and Standards Agency, the regulatory watchdog he helped establish.
(continued)
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d0bc64 No.24611735
>>24611729
2/2
Mr Clare will introduce legislation to parliament in July granting TEQSA new powers to fine universities for regulatory breaches. Universities have an August 31 deadline to implement a clear and enforceable definition of antisemitism. “We are making changes to the standards universities must meet to tackle antisemitism and other types of racism,’’ Mr Clare said on Thursday. “That includes having a definition of antisemitism and other forms of racism, and policies and complaints processes to address it.’’ The Coalition’s education spokesman, Julian Leeser, said it was “pathetic’’ that universities had failed to define and stamp out antisemitism. “How can you address a problem if you can’t even agree what it is?’’ Mr Leeser said.
“We have seen 15 of our fellow Australians murdered on Bondi Beach because of their religion – that should be a massive concern to every decent person.’’
The National Union of Students blasted the government’s intervention as “straight out of the Trump playbook’’. “Australia does not need the Americanisation of our university system, where governments threaten funding to pressure universities into ideological compliance,’’ NUS president Felix Hughes said.
He said antisemitism on campus was real and Jewish students should be safe, but insisted that “definitions of antisemitism cannot be used in ways that shut down legitimate criticism or scholarly examination of Israel’’.
However, Professor Craven said free speech was not an “absolute right’’. “Realistically, protecting against antisemitism in a university context will limit to some extent both academic freedom and freedom of speech,’’ his report states. “Writings that are overtly antisemitic, as opposed merely to being critical of the policies of the state of Israel, will be affected by such protections. Similarly, freedom of speech will be curtailed, current examples being the use of such slogans as ‘from the river to the sea’ or ‘globalise the intifada’.’’
Universities Australia announced last year that 39 institutions had agreed to a “clear definition’’ of antisemitism that included calls for the elimination of Israel, or holding Jews accountable for Israel’s actions. It stated that “substituting the word ‘Zionist’ for ‘Jew’ did not eliminate the possibility of speech being antisemitic’’.
More than a year later, Professor Craven found that 32 universities had failed to adopt a “clear, comprehensive and binding’’ definition. “A vaguely described concept of antisemitism contained in a low-level university policy that merely invites decision-makers to have regard to it as seems appropriate to them is not a definition,’’ he said.
Professor Craven, who has built a career developing and interpreting complex regulations, scorned some university definitions as “profoundly obscure, impenetrable and truly baffling’’.
He identified six universities for making the most effort: the University of Canberra, Swinburne University of Technology, Southern Cross University, the University of Southern Queensland, Charles Darwin University and Western Sydney University.
Universities Australia said on Thursday “antisemitism is abhorrent … Jewish students and staff should feel safe, respected and supported on campus, and we recognise the hurt and distress many in the community may have experienced’’. The Group of Eight sandstone universities at the centre of anti-Israel encampments in 2024 said “they are places of debate, protest and strong disagreement’’. “Any suggestion that universities are not doing enough to protect students and staff from harassment, intimidation or hate must be treated with urgency,’’ it said.
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/higher-education/jewish-academics-targeted-and-silenced-as-universities-face-fines-over-antisemitism/news-story/63389285dde5fd3a0069483877e38a12
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d0bc64 No.24611802
>>24424631 (pb)
>>24526266 (pb)
AUKUS pact a ‘once in a lifetime’ chance for Australia, says top US admiral
America’s top naval officer has backed the AUKUS submarine pact as a “once in a lifetime” opportunity to give Australia a “no kidding” undersea force.
Vanessa Marsh - May 15, 2026
America’s highest ranking naval officer has described the trilateral AUKUS pact as a “once in a lifetime” opportunity to equip Australia with a “no kidding” submarine force that will bolster joint defence capabilities against threats in the Indo Pacific.
US Chief of Naval Operations Admiral Daryl Caudle, the principal naval adviser to President Donald Trump, told the US House Armed Services Committee that AUKUS had his “full support” and he was confident the transfer of submarines to Australia would not impact US defence capabilities.
It comes as News Corp’s Defending Australia summit is held in South Australia today where Defence Minister Richard Marles is expected to deliver a keynote address detailing progress on the $368 billion submarine project.
Asked by ranking member of the House Seapower Joe Courtney about the findings of last year’s Pentagon review that endorsed the pact, Adm Caudle said he “wholeheartedly” agreed with it.
“I was part of it, I was in bed creating it,” he said.
“I made a lot of the recommendations in it that were actually adopted and fully support AUKUS Pillar I.”
“And I look forward to standing up submarine squadron three later this year and making sure that submarine rotational force west becomes alive and getting the first Virginia-class transfer to Australia next year as we continue to build out where they eventually buy US submarines. So I fully support it, sir.”
Under the AUKUS agreement, the US would begin selling nuclear-powered submarines to Australia beginning in the early 2030s.
Adm Caudle was asked if America’s marine industrial base would be able to fulfil its AUKUS commitments while also ensuring the US Navy had access to the undersea fleet it required.
He said the fleet requirements relied on force posture with homeports where the fleet could be maintained and operated, referencing the importance of existing squadrons in Guam, Hawaii and San Diego.
“And then what we’ve done, and I think in a very thoughtful way, is, for once in a lifetime, shared technology with a close partner, Australia, to give them a no kidding submarine force that will add an entirely new dimension to the threats we face in the Indo-Pacific,” Adm Caudle said.
“And so that, under the submarine squadron, and the way we will command and control that working with the Australian Navy, who are great partners and have been for decades, will give Admiral (Samuel) Paparo access to those submarines as well.”
Adm Caudle is a member of the Joint Chiefs of Staff and advises the White House, Pentagon and National Security Council.
He endorsed earlier support for the pact given to the same committee by Admiral Samuel Paparo, Commander of the Indo Pacific Command, who described the defence agreement as “essential”.
At the time, Adm Paparo said the AUKUS was on track and a rotational submarine squadron could be operated out of Australia as early as “tomorrow”.
https://www.dailytelegraph.com.au/technology/innovation/aukus-pact-a-once-in-a-lifetime-chance-for-australia-says-top-us-admiral/news-story/9ccf71f13001a3e422ed396e5a525caa
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d0bc64 No.24611825
>>24355021 (pb)
>>24561233 (pb)
>>24363915 (pb)
Australia to retask E-7 Wedgetail aircraft to support multinational operations in Strait of Hormuz
Robert Dougherty - 13 MAY 2026
Australia has announced it will retask a Royal Australian Air Force E-7A Wedgetail airborne early warning and control aircraft to support freedom of navigation through the Strait of Hormuz.
Australian Deputy Prime Minister and Minister for Defence Richard Marles confirmed intentions for the deployment on 13 May.
The deployment alongside allies under the multinational freedom of navigation operations follows a recent meeting of defence ministers from more than 40 countries.
“Australia stands ready to support an independent and strictly defensive multinational military mission, led by the United Kingdom and France, once it is established,” Deputy Prime Minister Marles said.
“Our intention is to contribute Australia’s world-leading E-7A Wedgetail aircraft to this defensive effort.
“While this platform is already doing work in the region, providing this capability would make a valuable contribution to the multinational mission and efforts to secure freedom of navigation in the Strait of Hormuz.
“The multinational military mission is designed to complement ongoing diplomatic engagement and de-escalation efforts while demonstrating a tangible commitment to the security of international trade.
“We want to see this conflict end, the Strait of Hormuz open and freedom of navigation resume. The longer this conflict goes on the more significant the impact on Australia will be. Our government is doing all we can to shield Australians from the impacts.
“We will continue to consult and work with partners to support these efforts.”
The United Kingdom has announced it will send a Daring Class air defence destroyer, HMS Dragon, to join freedom of navigation operations in the Strait of Hormuz.
The Portsmouth-based Royal Navy Type 45 destroyer will be joined by autonomous mine hunting equipment, counter-drone systems and Typhoon fighter jets to conduct air patrols for the future multinational defensive mission.
https://www.defenceconnect.com.au/air/18176-australia-to-retask-e-7-wedgetail-aircraft-to-support-multi-national-operations-in-strait-of-hormuz
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d0bc64 No.24611849
>>24521943 (pb)
Vanuatu defiant on security pact as Beijing beckons
BEN PACKHAM - May 14, 2026
Vanuatu has challenged Australia to drop its demand for a veto over Chinese deals if it wants to secure a far-reaching bilateral security pact, as it pushes ahead with a “comprehensive economic co-operation agreement” with Beijing.
The Albanese government is yet to agree to a new version of the countries’ Nakamal Agreement that was approved by Vanuatu’s Council of Ministers last Thursday, amid growing concerns over China’s surging influence in the region.
Vanuatu’s updated draft says Australia is the country’s primary policing partner and its critical infrastructure will not be militarised by another power but, unlike the original version, it would deny Australia the ability to block Chinese investment in sensitive sectors.
The proposed security deal is part of a region-wide effort by Australia to deny China a security foothold that could open the door to a permanent military presence.
“The government had reservations on certain parts of the (Nakamal) agreement it felt would compromise its longstanding position as a non-aligned state. We are friends to all, enemies to none,” a source in Vanuatu told The Australian.
“When the Nakamal Agreement came up it was going to have a lot of ramifications. It was going to limit us and put a lot of projects the government already had in the pipeline in jeopardy.
“It will be really up to Canberra whether they will assent on (the new draft agreement).”
The proposed agreement comes as Vanuatu negotiates a new bilateral partnership with Beijing called the Namele Agreement. The source denied the planned China pact had a security element, as widely reported.
Two-year limbo
“The Namele Agreement is totally different from the Nakamal Agreement. Nakamal is more like a security pact. Namele is more comprehensive economic co-operation with Vanuatu.”
The Australia-Vanuatu deal has been in limbo for years after Port Vila cancelled a previous security agreement in 2022, and then failed to finalise the Nakamal Agreement in 2025 when Anthony Albanese arrived to sign it. The deal was originally worth $500m to Vanuatu in infrastructure and other support.
If the Albanese government agrees to the terms of the revised agreement, Vanuatu’s Prime Minister Jotham Napat would likely travel to Australia for a formal signing ceremony in coming weeks.
Former Australian diplomat James Batley, who served in senior roles across the Pacific, said he believed the Albanese government would agree to the revised deal “assuming it hasn’t been completely gutted”.
The ANU distinguished policy fellow said that “like politics, diplomacy is the art of the possible”.
“Assuming it is concluded I expect the agreement will still represent a major milestone in relations between Australia and Vanuatu,” Mr Batley said.
“Depending on the scope of the agreement, it may open the way for greater Australian investment in Vanuatu’s national development, which is already considerable.
“The agreement won’t shut China out of Vanuatu, but that’s not a realistic objective at this point.
“Vanuatu wants an agreement with Australia, and I would expect an agreement to cement Australia as Vanuatu’s key development and security partner.”
Foreign Minister Penny Wong has said Australia is in “a state of permanent contest” with China in the Pacific – a contest others have referred to as a “knife fight” and a never-ending game of “whack-a-mole”.
The government has signed a string of security agreements with Pacific countries including a landmark defence treaty with Papua New Guinea, and pacts with Tuvalu and Nauru. It is also working towards a major treaty with Fiji.
It requires the deals to be exclusive, and for Australia to have a right of veto over Chinese investments in critical infrastructure.
Vanuatu is one of the South Pacific nations most susceptible to Chinese influence. Beijing owns 30 per cent of the country’s debt, and has delivered an array of major projects in critical areas including the $145m Luganville Wharf, a $66m upgrade to Port Vila’s international airport, and a Huawei data centre and surveillance facility.
One of the PLA-Navy’s most advanced destroyers and an accompanying cruiser docked at the Chinese-delivered wharf in October 2024, in a major show of strength.
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation/politics/vanuatu-defiant-on-security-pact-as-beijing-beckons/news-story/fd142ace69b1363dd40f695da1e45a72
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d0bc64 No.24611895
Lawyer for notorious paedophile Peter Liddy says indefinite jail would be an 'abuse of process'
Jordanna Schriever - 13 May 2026
Keeping paedophile former magistrate Peter Liddy in prison at the completion of his 25-year jail term next month would be an "abuse of process", his lawyers have told South Australia's Supreme Court.
The notorious child abuser, who is now in his 80s, was jailed in 2001 for sexually offending against four children between 1983 and 1986.
He has remained in custody since, having previously been refused parole, but his prison term is due to expire in three weeks, on June 4.
Jeff Powell SC, for Liddy, asked the court to permanently stay the government's application to keep his client behind bars, suggesting his client's case was "rare and exceptional".
He said it would be "unjust to subject him to an inquiry" given a 2019 report by a forensic psychiatrist had already found Liddy was capable of controlling his sexual instincts.
"It would be an abuse of process of the court to do so," Mr Powell said.
Mr Powell said that report, by Dr Craig Raeside, had found there was "no indication that [Liddy] was incapable of controlling his sexual conduct" and that he "would not support a finding that Mr Liddy is unwilling to control his sexual behaviour".
He said Dr Raeside had further suggested that any risk Liddy may pose if released into the community "could be adequately managed with appropriate supervision".
He said a prison program had deemed Liddy to be at "average risk of sexual reoffending" which equated to a low-to-moderate risk.
Mr Powell criticised the timing of the government's application which was filed in February, just months before Liddy was due to be released.
"His circumstances have been fully known by the Crown for years, the fact of his offending hasn't changed, the unproven allegations haven't changed, the fact that there is ongoing denials is unchanged … there is nothing new here," he said.
"What has changed is that … he is now, of course, older, he is frailer and he is more unwell.
"He has an unblemished record as a prisoner for 25 years."
Mr Powell said Liddy's compliant conduct while in custody appeared to be viewed by the government as "a facade".
'Detain people until they confess'
Alison Doecke KC, for the government, said shelving the proceedings would be "inappropriate" and that the government was under "no obligation" to file its applications any earlier.
She said there were issues with Dr Raeside's 2019 report, because it was almost seven years old, did not include a current risk assessment and did not include the findings of a six-month sexual offender course Liddy had completed in prison.
She said it was also unclear how much consideration Dr Raeside had given unproven allegations against Liddy.
"Liddy has committed horrendous sexual offending which has been denied," she said.
She said those continued denials, meant a prison treatment program had been unable to assess his potential risk.
"I don't think it's the point that you detain people until they confess," she said.
"What is missing from Raeside's report … is how does this man's denial impact his current risk level?
"The reason to detain is that in the absence of accurate and reliable assessment of the risk, your Honour should not be reassured by what is an 'average risk of sexual re-offending'."
She said it was also "important to recognise" that Liddy's cognitive capacity had "fluctuated markedly over time" and that "in more recent times there is no concern about Mr Liddy's cognitive capacity".
"The court needs to have caution in closing off this application by granting a permanent stay on the basis of a report that is six-and-a-half years old for a man we know whose cognitive capacity has fluctuated over time."
The government has also sought Liddy be subject to a supervision order if released.
Ms Doecke said if granted, that order should include a six-month period of strict home detention conditions.
Liddy's lawyers, however, said any period of home detention should last only three months.
The court heard that the restrictions sought would also include limiting Liddy's access to a computer or the internet — even though he had "never used a computer and doesn't intend to".
The court heard the premises where Liddy would live were "currently being assessed", but Ms Doecke said there were "complexities" which could not be articulated in open court.
She said "practical steps" including connecting electricity were still required.
Justice Rachael Gray will deliver a decision next week.
https://www.abc.net.au/news/2026-05-13/paedophile-peter-liddy-contests-indefinite-detention/106675082
https://qresear.ch/?q=Peter+Liddy
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d0bc64 No.24612038
>>24599941
>>24599944
The trouble in Surfers Paradise over grand designs of Trump clan
The first family’s plan for Australia’s tallest building came spectacularly unstuck on Queensland’s beloved beachfront, to the delight of opponents
Roger Maynard - May 15 2026
1/2
For a few short months after Valentine’s Day, the Trumps setting up shop in Surfers Paradise followed a similar pattern to the Trumps setting up shop anywhere else in the world.
The president’s sons, Donald Jr and Eric, had entertained a man called Tom Tate, mayor of Australia’s Gold Coast, at Mar-a-Lago, and in February they announced that a developer would build a skyscraper, the tallest in Australia at 1,099ft, bearing the Trump name.
It was talked up with great fanfare and made headlines as the country got its first of the beautiful buildings the president likes to declare he builds. Back in February, Eric Trump proclaimed the deal reflected “our unwavering commitment to delivering world-class luxury experiences in iconic locations around the world”.
Their commitment, however, would waver before too long. The 285-room luxury hotel bearing the Trump trademark has now been axed. So too has the 92-storey residential building, beach club, Michelin-starred restaurant and shops there were due to follow by 2030, all at a cost of around a billion dollars.
The Trumps have accused David Young, who leads the property developer, Altus, of short-changing them. “After months of negotiations and empty promises, one after another, about a supposed A$1.5 billion project, Altus Property Group was unable to meet the most basic financial obligation that was due upon signing the agreement,” a Trump Organisation spokesman told Reuters.
The Trumps claimed Young had attributed the contract termination to “certain world events”, describing this as “simply a strategy to deflect attention from his own failings and failures”.
Young, meanwhile, said the Trump brand had become “toxic to Australians” in recent months, not least due to the war in Iran. He stressed, however, that he knew the Trump Organisation had “nothing to do with the president”.
That may be, but there has been a growing divide between Australia and the White House. Last month, Penny Wong, the foreign minister, ruffled feathers in Washington when she said it had been “difficult” to watch Trump behaving “very differently to how we previously envisioned America”. She added: “We know that he prizes unpredictability.”
There was a general local unease with the project and its links to the first family, too. At least 140,000 people had signed four separate petitions demanding a halt to the work, with signatories “deeply uncomfortable with the Trump brand and what it represents”.
On the Gold Coast, the notion of a Trump tower limiting access to the beach prompted anger in a nation where sand and surf are sacrosanct. Craig Hill, one of the leaders behind the anti-Trump campaign, said the project did not fit in with Australian common values. He said the campaign against the project had united locals. “All these Australians working together for a common cause was fantastic and very inspirational,” he told The Times. “The Trump brand is toxic.”
“There is no bad blood between the Trump family and me,” Young wrote on LinkedIn, claiming he had maintained a relationship of almost two decades with the Trump family. “It’s purely business.”
(continued)
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d0bc64 No.24612042
>>24612038
2/2
Tate was frank about the failure of the deal, claiming it had less to do with relationships and more to do with profit margins. “It’s all about money,” he told ABC. “The Trump Organisation wants a lot more from their brand on the funding side of things, to operate it and the percentage of return.”
He added: “The developer’s going: ‘Well I’m putting in all of my money in and you’re going to take quite a lot of profit,’ so I think that’s why they’re parting ways.” It means that the prime beachfront site which was earmarked for the development will remain empty for the time being.
Hill is thankful for small mercies. Although he and his campaigners were not necessarily opposed to development of the land, he was worried about the impact of a super tower. “Real estate prices would go up, rates would go up and there’d be a thousand new cars a day going into the street — it would be absolute bloody chaos,” he said. “I don’t think the taxpayer should have to pay so some corporation can make millions of dollars.”
However, Jordan Quoc-Tien Hoai Nguyen, a Gold Coast investor who had supported the Trump project said the block would not remain empty. “At some point something has to be built,” he said.
The Trumps, meanwhile, have moved on to pastures new in their property empire with hotels, residential buildings and golf courses expanding around the world.
Their latest project is in Georgia, a nation where fears are rising that the former Soviet republic could be pulled back into the Kremlin’s orbit. If the building, planned at 70 storeys in the capital, Tbilisi, is ever finished it will be the completion of a long-standing Trump ambition. And unlike the development on Australia’s Gold Coast, this seems a personal project for the commander-in-chief.
Back in December 2009, Ivana Trump, the president’s former wife, travelled to Georgia to meet Mikheil Saakashvili, the then president, and explore investments in Black Sea tourist resorts. A year later, Trump’s former attorney Michael Cohen visited, reportedly stating: ‘I’m here to walk the land and smell the dirt’. He added that Trump had been impressed by Saakashvili during a meeting in New York. “We’re looking for profit from Georgia,” he said.
Trump himself visited in 2012, travelling to the Black Sea resort of Batumi and, alongside Saakashvili, announced a deal to license his name for a $250 million, 47-storey Trump Tower to be developed by Silk Road Group. That never materialised, however.
Speaking about the latest plan, Eric Trump said: “The Trump name is synonymous with some of the most luxurious real estate developments in the world, and Trump Tower Tbilisi stands as a continuation of that legacy.
“We are proud to bring this globally recognised standard of excellence to Georgia and are especially pleased to collaborate with such respected and professional developers on this project.”
https://www.thetimes.com/us/newstoday/article/trump-australia-skyscraper-tq8w37pqc
https://www.goldcoastbulletin.com.au/news/gold-coast-developer-says-trump-brand-became-toxic-as-tower-deal-collapses/news-story/6e78c77341e4dd9f1cf211085e6afffd
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d0bc64 No.24616846
YouTube embed. Click thumbnail to play.
>>24611309
>>24611677
Prime Minister Anthony Albanese vows to defend hate group laws as neo-Nazis plan court fight
LIAM BEATTY and NATHAN SCHMIDT - May 16, 2026
Members and supporters of a now-banned hate group have rushed to delete their online footprints, warning “don’t allow yourself to become an example made by the state”.
Home Affairs Minister Tony Burke announced on Friday the National Socialist Network (NSN), and affiliated groups White Australia and the European Australian Movement, would be listed as a prohibited hate group under Australian law at midnight.
This was the second such listing after Islamist group Hizb ut-Tahrir.
Under the designation, Mr Burke said supporting, funding, training, recruiting, joining, or directing this group constitutes a criminal offence with a maximum penalty of 15 years in prison.
“It sends a clear message to people who believe in racial supremacy that their views have no place in modern Australia,” he said on Friday.
In response to the new laws passing parliament earlier this year in the wake of the alleged Bondi terror attack, the NSN announced the group would disband.
However, Mr Burke alleged they had changed their name and continued organising.
“Effectively what they did, for want of a better term, is phoenix,” he said.
“(They) changed their name, they did not change the fact they were still an organisation and still engaged in the exact sort of behaviour that met the threshold for this legislation.
“It doesn’t matter what they call themselves, or how they structure themselves, these groups use all the well-known techniques of thuggery and menace that Nazis have always used against Jewish communities and other groups they have targeted.”
Following the announcement on Friday, former members of the NSN have wiped their public social media profiles as a message is shared among supporters of the group.
It warns supporters to “proceed with extreme caution” and not praise the group online, share posts or footage and leave group chats containing “ex-members”.
“Please take this seriously,” it reads.
“Don’t allow yourself to become an example made by the state.”
In a statement shared online by former NSN leader Thomas Sewell, he claimed the move was because the government “hates white Australians” and was a response to his attempt to create a new political party.
Mr Sewell said he had filed a High Court appeal against the laws.
Speaking on Saturday, Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said his government was “absolutely confident” the challenge would fail.
“We’ve outlawed the neo-Nazis that have gone through various name changes but the policies remain the same; the policies of hatred, the policies of antisemitism, the policies of trying to divide people against and target people who are Australians,” he said.
“They’re important laws for Australians and we will stand by them, we will defend them.”
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/news/latest-news/prime-minister-anthony-albanese-vows-to-defend-hate-group-laws-as-neonazis-plan-court-fight/news-story/0169bf98e3df39c86f4db74ba4c1def7
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vSLS0Po76RA
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d0bc64 No.24616870
>>24603494
Protesters march at Nakba Day rallies around Australia
abc.net.au - 17 May 2026
1/2
Protesters have marched in cities across Australia to mark the Nakba, a day that recognises the mass displacement of Palestinians during the 1948 Arab-Israeli war.
The anniversary of the Nakba, which means "catastrophe" in Arabic, falls on May 15 each year.
About 500 people attended a rally to commemorate the Nakba in Melbourne on Sunday, marching from the State Library to Flinders Street Station.
Palestinian-Australian surgeon Dr Bushra Othman addressed the crowd assembled on the steps of the library.
"Seventy-eight years ago, Palestinian people were driven from their homes carrying keys they believed they would soon use again," Dr Otham said.
"Those keys became heirlooms, those homes became memories."
Senator Lidia Thorpe told the rally Aboriginal Australians stood with the Palestinian people.
"I wish these anniversaries could be events of healing. But the Nakba is not over and continues to this very day," she said.
Greens Senator David Shoebridge accused the Australian government of "silence and complicity" in the current Middle East conflict.
"There was no one day when the Nakba started, there is no one day when the Nakba ended. It continues," he said.
Several people held Israeli flags up across the road from the pro-Palestinian rally, but the two groups were separated by police.
Police said there were "no issues" during the event.
Organisers 'encouraged' by crowds
In Brisbane, about 350 protesters gathered in the CBD to commemorate Nakba Day.
During the rally, the crowd heard from multiple Palestinian speakers who spoke of resistance and recounted stories of Nakba survivors and the generations that have come after them.
There was a recurring theme of hope amongst the speakers, and chants of "free, free Palestine" could be heard ringing out across the CBD as the crowds marched with megaphones, signs and Palestinian flags.
Among those in attendance was Nick Hanna, the lawyer representing a number of Queenslanders who are facing hate speech charges in relation to banned phrases.
In Perth, about 300 people attended the city's Nakba Day rally, which included a march through the city.
Friends of Palestine WA secretary Nick Everett said the rally was an opportunity to stand in solidarity.
The Perth rally was attended by community groups including the Palestinian Community of WA.
"This is one rally in an ongoing campaign … we're really encouraged by the numbers here today," Mr Everett said.
"For Palestinians the term Nakba means catastrophe, and each year Palestinians protest the ongoing Israeli cleansing of their lands.
"We urge people to take notice, write to their politicians and join us in our call for justice."
(continued)
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d0bc64 No.24616874
>>24616870
2/2
Significance of day 'immense'
More than 200 people gathered outside parliament in Adelaide to show their support for the Palestinian community on Nakba Day.
There was a strong police presence of about a dozen officers, and the crowd chanted "free Palestine" throughout the protest.
Husam Elassaad, a member of South Australia's Palestinian community, addressed the crowd and spoke about the impact of the dispossession on his community and family.
In Hobart, more than 100 people marched through the city before gathering on the lawns outside of Parliament House.
There were multiple speeches by members of Friends of Palestine Tasmania and the Tasmanian Palestine Advocacy Network (TPAN), along with poetry readings and musical performances.
TPAN member Zainab Fadhil said the significance of the day was "immense".
"It shows the fight and the struggle that's been continuing on for hundreds of years for the Palestinian people," she said.
"Nakba demonstrates the impact that it had on the people so many years ago and people continue to show up today regardless of how long ago it was, because it's still important and significant.
"Regardless of the person, the race, the religion, the gender, we are all here to support the Palestinian people and their right of living."
In November 1947, the UN General Assembly passed a resolution partitioning Palestine into two states, one Jewish and one Arab, with Jerusalem under a UN administration.
The Arab world rejected the plan, resulting in a war in 1948 after the departure of British forces and the declaration of independence of the State of Israel.
An estimated 750,000 refugees from historic Palestine either fled or were expelled from their homes, many going to refugee camps or neighbouring countries.
In 1948, the UN General Assembly adopted a resolution resolving that "refugees wishing to return to their homes … should be permitted to do so".
The "right of return" of those refugees to what is now Israel is a core demand of most Palestinian groups, and has been one of the most intractable issues in negotiations between Israel and Palestinian representatives.
https://www.abc.net.au/news/2026-05-17/nakba-day-rallies-held-around-australia/106689562
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d0bc64 No.24616963
>>24451132 (pb)
Secret IBAC report into Daniel Andrews’ firefighters union deal set for release
DAMON JOHNSTON - May 15, 2026
IBAC is moving to release the findings of its highly confidential investigation into dealings between Labor and Victoria’s firefighters union in little more than a week.
In a step that threatens to trigger a major integrity crisis for Premier Jacinta Allan just six months before the state election, the Independent Broad-based Anti-corruption Commission has told witnesses in the marathon probe that it plans to table the report in parliament during the week starting Monday, May 25. Wednesday, May 27, shapes as the most likely day for the release.
The anti-corruption agency has written to witnesses in the past week alerting them to the imminent release of the special report into Operation Richmond, an investigation that has dragged on for longer than World War II.
Operation Richmond has been running under tight secrecy since 2019 and while no public hearings were called, scores of witnesses – including then premier Daniel Andrews – were grilled in private by IBAC.
The investigation, sparked by a complaint from a Labor insider, has been digging into the 2016 pay-and-conditions negotiations between the Andrews government and the United Firefighters Union and its state secretary Peter Marshall.
The Australian has approached IBAC for comment.
In a newsletter released last month, IBAC Commissioner Victoria Elliott confirmed the agency was preparing to release the long-delayed findings and recommendations.
“IBAC is committed to publishing the Operation Richmond special report as soon as possible – with a view to publication before the end of the financial year,” Ms Elliott wrote in April.
In a letter to witnesses, IBAC has confirmed they won’t know if their response to IBAC’s draft findings and comments will be included in the final report until it’s tabled in parliament.
IBAC told witnesses it was not the agency’s practice to inform them if revisions had been made to a draft report, or to provide an updated draft report.
The agency said it intended to stick to this process.
The Australian has reported that in private examinations, IBAC grilled witnesses about the role played by Mr Andrews in the negotiations – which led to a favourable enterprise bargaining agreement with the UFU.
Mr Andrews and IBAC have repeatedly dodged questions about whether he was cross-examined during closed-door Operation Richmond hearings.
The Australian believes Mr Andrews, as premier, was grilled in a private hearing over events that handed the union generous allowances and effective operational control over the volunteer Country Fire Authority.
One of the aspects that IBAC is believed to have looked at is whether the 2016 EBA deal Mr Andrews struck with the UFU was influenced by the UFU campaigning for Labor during the 2014 election.
In the April newsletter, Ms Elliott conceded Operation Richmond had dragged on for too long. “We acknowledge the Operation Richmond special report process has been complex and has taken too long,” she wrote, adding that “there were a number of factors outside of our control which have delayed publication, including the pandemic and court matters”.
“We have reviewed our processes internally and made improvements to ensure what is within our control is completed as efficiently as possible for future IBAC special reports.”
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation/secret-ibac-report-into-daniel-andrews-firefighters-union-deal-set-for-release/news-story/16f9ea4e1de65f7d463571e9ee3e7608
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d0bc64 No.24616984
>>24616963
Taxpayers face $134,000 bill for Dan Andrews statue
DAMON JOHNSTON - May 15, 2026
Dan Andrews will be immortalised in bronze, with Premier Jacinta Allan confirming work is under way on a statue to honour the controversial former Labor premier.
In a Friday afternoon announcement, Ms Allan’s office confirmed a $134,000 contract had been awarded to erect the statue, which will join sculptures of other premiers who have led Victoria for more than 3000 days.
“Daniel Andrews led Victoria through some of its toughest moments and never stopped fighting for working people,” a government spokesperson said.
Governments regularly time announcements they fear may be unpopular for Friday afternoons in what is known in politics as “taking out the trash” in a bid to minimise the coverage.
Under an honour system introduced by former Liberal premier Jeff Kennett in 1999, premiers who lead the state for more than 3000 days can be acknowledged with the permanent tribute.
Mr Kennett, while acknowledging Mr Andrews had led Victoria for 3219 days, quipped that the statue of the former premier should be melted down and sold to help repay the state’s debt, which will hit almost $200bn by 2030.
“Our children who will be saddled with paying his debt off would appreciate the help,” Mr Kennett told The Australian, before adding that the statue should feature Mr Andrews wearing a mask.
“The sculpture should definitely feature a mask,” he said, referencing the fact Mr Andrews locked down Melbourne for more than 260 days during the pandemic.
“After all, if the statue is meant to reflect a leader’s time in office, then a mask would be fitting.”
Four former premiers qualified for the honour; Albert Dunstan (3834 days, 1935-45), Henry Bolte (6288 days, 1955-72), Rupert Hamer (3209 days, 1972-81) and John Cain Jr (3047 days, 1982-90).
Their statues stand directly outside the premier’s office at No.1 Treasury Place.
Mr Kennett was closing in on being the fifth statue, but Victorians voted him out after 2571 days in office.
Until Mr Andrews’ dominance, Steve Bracks (who won elections in 1999, 2002 and 2006) was the only modern-day premier who came close to qualifying for a statue. But in 2007, just 159 days short, he retired.
The government confirmed that Meridian Sculpture was selected because “they’ve got specialist experience delivering major sculptural works, including statues of four other long-serving Victorian premiers”.
The total cost of the statue is $134,304. The government said work was under way and installation details would be announced at a later date.
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation/taxpayers-face-134000-bill-for-dan-andrews-statue/news-story/569d39da9411501fd7a7c28494d6e54f
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d0bc64 No.24617170
>>23895384 (pb)
>>24523341 (pb)
>>24526238 (pb)
>>24566300 (pb)
AFP to take on global drug cartels with Pacific-international strike force
AMANDA HODGE - 17 May 2026
1/2
Australia will work with Mexican and Colombian law enforcers to target some of the world’s biggest drug cartels on their home turf in an aggressive new regional response with the US, New Zealand and Pacific island nations to stem a surge of illicit narcotics swamping the region.
Australian Federal Police Commissioner Krissy Barrett will tell a landmark Pacific Transnational Crime Summit in Fiji on Wednesday, comprising Pacific police ministers and regional and international law enforcement agencies, that a bolder approach is needed to address the spiralling national security threat to Australia and its vulnerable Pacific neighbours posed by transnational drug criminals.
A new International Joint Investigations Team based in Colombia will see AFP officers work with local law enforcement, where they legally can, to stop illicit drugs at their source countries, to capitalise and build on the disruption to cartel trafficking networks caused by US strikes on suspected narco-vessels in the Caribbean and eastern Pacific.
AFP and New Zealand police will help fund the new strikeforce that will gather evidence on illicit shipments before they reach the Pacific region, supported by the Australian Border Force and NZ Customs.
“Coming together with trusted partners is how we will target and frustrate the cartels and other organised criminals,” Ms Barrett writes exclusively for The Australian. “We will do this with the Colombian Attorney-General’s Office, the National Police of Colombia, Colombian navy, Mexican authorities, US law enforcement authorities, NZ Police, Interpol and Pacific chiefs to target and disrupt organised criminals,” she says.
“We must do this for the collective health, security and sovereignty of like-minded countries that embrace the rules-based order and democracy,” she adds in a thinly veiled swipe at Beijing.
The Albanese government has been working hard to secure bilateral and Pacific-wide security and policing agreements, including the recently renegotiated Vuvale Agreement with Fiji, aimed in part at countering China’s persistent push for a security foothold on Australia’s doorstep.
The Pacific’s growing drug and associated public health crisis has added urgency to that mission.
Some 17 tonnes of illicit drugs, mostly cocaine, have been seized by local and international law enforcement in the Pacific so far this year, up from 4.6 tonnes for all of 2025.
Even that statistic tells only part of the story. While many more tonnes have evaded law enforcement through the so-called Pacific narco-corridor to Australia, where street drugs command the highest prices in the world, cocaine and meth by the tonne are also pouring into the Pacific to tiny communities with far less capacity to deal with it.
“The increase is partly because greedy and ruthless narco-gangs are trying to make more money by identifying new ways to traffic illicit drugs. The use of semi-submersible vehicles to cross the Pacific is one example,” Ms Barrett writes.
At least four have been discovered in Solomon Island waters since August last year as cartels employ ever more sophisticated technology to evade capture.
(continued)
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d0bc64 No.24617173
>>24617170
2/2
It is also a result of deep-pocketed Australians’ insatiable demand for illicit drugs, which Ms Barrett calls “our nation’s shame”.
“The magnitude and endless maritime trafficking of illicit drugs to and through the Pacific has become a serious national security threat for the Pacific and Australia.
“It is a threat the AFP cannot ignore … (and) it must be countered to protect our regional security and the safety of our collective communities.”
While organised criminals in Australia have long enjoyed luxury lifestyles on the proceeds of a drug trade that inflicts misery and violence on the community – all too often children – transnational drug smuggling is now “corroding (Pacific island) health systems, family structures, and their future”.
Pacific Island Chiefs of Police, who for years have watched the impact of illicit drugs on Australian society, are now crying out for help to address a crisis that was tearing at the essential scaffolding of Pacific society – faith, family and culture, she adds.
The AFP is already stationed in Bogota and working with local law enforcers to target and destroy remote Colombian jungle drug labs, which pump out as much as 70 per cent of the world’s cocaine.
Just this month, the AFP supported Colombian enforcement agencies in the arrest of multiple people allegedly involved in drug trafficking networks operating in narco-terrorist controlled territories where many tonnes of cocaine are produced to send to Australia.
More than 20 tonnes of cocaine have been seized in the past few years alone as a result of AFP and Colombian police co-operation, including the October 2024 interception at sea of 5.5 tonnes inside a self-propelled, semi-submersible bound for Australia.
“It is time for us to be bolder and do more to help the Pacific, Australians and our region,” Ms Barrett says.
“Pacific Island Chiefs of Police are vocal (about) the need for a significant intervention, and this has been heard by the AFP and around the world.”
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation/afp-to-take-on-global-drug-cartels-with-pacificinternational-strike-force/news-story/687eb01b61a528a9dff6ce92d8780763
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d0bc64 No.24617189
>>24617170
COMMENTARY: Drug trade corrodes communities and threatens Pacific security
KRISSY BARRETT - 17 May 2026
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Seventeen tonnes of illicit drugs, mostly cocaine, have been seized by local and international law enforcement in the Pacific since January. That equates to about three tonnes of illicit drugs seized every month since the start of this year. In 2025, the total seizure of illicit drugs in the Pacific region was about 4.6 tonnes.
The increase is partly because greedy, ruthless narco-gangs are trying to make more money by identifying new ways to traffic illicit drugs. The use of semi-submersible vehicles to cross the Pacific is an example. The magnitude and endless maritime trafficking of illicit drugs to, and through the Pacific, has become a serious security threat for the Pacific and Australia, one the AFP cannot ignore. This serious vulnerability must be countered to protect our regional security and the safety of our communities.
The AFP and our international partners will step up for three clear reasons: 1) most of the illicit drugs being trafficked to, and through the Pacific, are destined for Australia, so we have a moral responsibility to act and a direct responsibility to the Australian public to stop these drugs from reaching our shores; 2) our Pacific family is seeking help, and; 3) the AFP, with like-minded law enforcement agencies, is the partner of choice to help fight this problem, consistent with Pacific leaders’ agreement security must be the shared responsibility of Pacific Islands Forum members.
From the AFP’s perspective, there is no point mincing words – it is our nation’s shame that Australians consume too many illicit drugs and pay high prices for them. As police, we see every day the brutal reality of illegal drug use and serious organised criminals who direct their unlawful business here. They create misery in our communities and wreak havoc in our country. Some victims, who have endured the most shocking violence and cruelty, have suffered by perpetrators affected by illicit drugs such as methamphetamine.
Too many victims are children. While law-abiding Australians work hard for their money, organised criminals are living life large, not paying tax, and are now tasking our youth to carry out crimes so they can put a distance between them and their criminal activity. These are the reasons why the AFP invests time and resources in combating and disrupting transnational organised crime. The Pacific Island Chiefs of Police group has watched from afar the impacts of illicit drugs on Australia and now they fear the diabolical reality facing their communities.
The illicit drug threat to Pacific communities is exponentially increasing – corroding their health systems, their family structures, and their future – their next generation. The effect on such small populations is devastating. It is a complete undermining of their faith, family structure and proud culture. This is where the leadership of Fiji Police Commissioner Rusiate Tudravu has come to the fore. He wants the Australian public to know Pacific communities have never been more at risk from the effects of illicit drugs. He is advocating for stronger responses to address the challenges of resourcing and expertise, as well as the timely sharing of information that takes into consideration the needs of all the Pacific.
He has implored the AFP and other partners to help protect his country and the wider Pacific because Pacific regionalism is about the collective, and nothing underscores this more than the influence of Pacific Island Chiefs of Police. The chiefs are vocal for the need for a significant intervention, and this has been heard by the AFP and around the world. With narco-gangs under threat because of strong law enforcement action in North America, the AFP will use its extensive partnerships to take new action. We will do this with the Colombian Attorney-General’s Office, the National Police of Colombia, Columbian navy, Mexican authorities, US law enforcement authorities, New Zealand Police, Interpol and the Pacific chiefs to target and disrupt organised criminals. From May 18-22, the Fiji Police Force and the AFP will co-host the Pacific Transnational Crime Summit in Fiji to strengthen regional co-operation on transnational crime. The summit will be held in partnership with the Pacific Transnational Crime Network, which includes crime units in 21 Pacific Island countries.
(continued)
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d0bc64 No.24617194
>>24617189
2/2
The Pacific Transnational Crime Co-ordination Centre, hosted in Samoa, co-ordinates and analyses information from crime units, and is one of the first lines of defence to protect Pacific nations and our region. The summit will bring together Pacific police ministers, senior Pacific operational law enforcement leaders and international partner agencies to share information about the strategic challenges, strengthen collaboration and find tangible solutions.
The AFP will work with local law enforcement to target criminals in their own backyard and be more aggressive at stopping illicit drugs at source countries.
Colombia produces about 70 per cent of the world’s cocaine. Drug cartels send many tonnes of cocaine and other illicit substances to Australia each year. Our AFP members in Bogota, with Colombian law enforcement, have deployed to remote parts of the Colombian jungle to deliberately destroy cocaine production laboratories. Just this month, the AFP in Bogota supported Colombian law enforcement during the arrests of people allegedly supporting drug trafficking networks operating in narco-terrorist-controlled territories where cocaine is produced to send to Australia.
In the past couple of years the AFP-Colombian co-operation has seized more than 20 tonnes of cocaine, including 5.5 tonnes located on a self-propelled semi-submersible in the Pacific Ocean bound for Australia in October 2024. But with like-minded law enforcement partners, it is time for us to be bolder and do more to help the Pacific, Australians and our region. It is a credit to law enforcement agencies in Colombia and Mexico that they are willing to help the Pacific.
The AFP and NZ Police will help fund an International Joint Investigations Team in Colombia to gather evidence about illicit drug shipments to help stop it coming to our region. It will be supported by Australian Border Force and NZ Customs. Coming together with trusted partners is how we will target and frustrate cartels and organised criminals. We must do this for the collective health, security and sovereignty of like-minded countries that embrace the rules-based order and democracy.
Krissy Barrett is AFP Commissioner.
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/commentary/drug-trade-corrodes-communities-and-threatens-pacific-securit/news-story/37f60b164b6ee459746b38bf85fee568
https://au.news.yahoo.com/boats-13000km-journey-to-australia-cut-short-after-sinister-discovery-on-board-020904048.html
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2025/jul/11/colombia-narco-submarine-cocaine
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d0bc64 No.24617218
>>23888045 (pb)
>>24260283 (pb)
>>24272813 (pb)
Tasmania moves to close legal loophole for child abuse survivor compensation
Tasmania will introduce legislation allowing sexual abuse survivors to claim compensation from institutions after a High Court ruling blocked such claims.
Sue Bailey - May 16, 2026
A move by the state government to legislate to allow for more survivors of sexual abuse to seek compensation has been hailed as “fantastic” by a leading advocacy group.
Attorney-General Guy Barnett announced that the government would seek feedback on the legislation which has been drafted in response to the High Court decision in the case of Bird v DP.
In a landmark decision in November 2024, the High Court ruled that institutions including churches and clubs cannot be held “vicariously liable” for child sexual abuse committed by a person who is not technically their employee.
Victoria passed legislation this year to address the implications of the court decision to also allow victims to claim compensation retrospectively.
Beyond Abuse founder Steve Fisher praised the Tasmanian government to follow other states and for acting swiftly to help victim survivors.
“We only had two meetings with the government and they listened to us and they have acted very fast,” he said.
“People who have been abused by institutions can finally get the compensation that they deserve.
“It’s going to create a level playing field for survivors. They’ll finally get the justice in monetary terms that they can and we just cannot thank the Tasmanian government enough.”
Mr Fisher was unable to say how many people he expected would take advantage of the legislation.
“If this legislation helps just one person it will be worth it,” he said.
“It’s very hard to know how many people will be affected, but what I would say to them is to come forward, come forward to us, anybody in your life, and we will point you in the right direction.
“The fact it has been made retrospective is just brilliant.
“It’s done in consultation with victim survivors and victim survivor advocates because that gives you a unique insight into what abuse survivors battle with every day and what is needed to help them have a life that they were robbed of by being abused.”
Mr Barnett described the legislation as a “major law reform” that would help victim survivors.
“It flows from the High Court case in Bird v DP and it will allow victim survivors to make claims to support their claims and concerns with respect to child abuse,” he said.
Mr Barnett said the High Court decision “created an anomaly in the law”.
“So where there’s been child sexual abuse in institutions and other organisations, victim survivors were not able to make that claim based on that High Court case,” he said.
“It could be any institutions of any colour or persuasion where there has been child sexual abuse and so that’s simply the justice system will be at work and there is likely to be some claims in the future.”
https://www.themercury.com.au/news/tasmania/tasmania-moves-to-close-legal-loophole-for-child-abuse-survivor-compensation/news-story/066cb1d29369a8ab08c608c1a775d74b
https://qresear.ch/?q=Steve+Fisher
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d0bc64 No.24618462
>>24611309
>>24611677
>>24616846
‘Democracy is dead, act accordingly’: Neo-Nazis lodge High Court fight
Sherryn Groch - May 18, 2026
Neo-Nazis have lodged a constitutional challenge in the High Court against new federal laws outlawing them as a hate group, as they fight to form a political party.
The National Socialist Network disbanded on paper in January in an attempt to escape the government’s crackdown on extremism that could see its members and supporters face up to 15 years in prison.
But on Friday, Home Affairs Minister Tony Burke proscribed the group anyway, noting members had continued to organise covertly, “phoenixing” under new names such as White Australia.
Within days of the NSN disbanding, its leader Thomas Sewell had fundraised a war chest of more than $150,000 for his efforts to challenge the laws in court.
Documents released by the High Court on Monday reveal the group plans to use the reinstatement of the once-banned Communist Party of Australia – its ideological enemies – in the appeal, arguing that a government banning even “an unfashionable political party” infringes on the implied right to political freedom in Australia, and gives punitive power to the government without judicial review.
The group is seeking an immediate injunction voiding the proscription of the NSN, and so any potential arrests under the new law, until the appeal is heard. The case was filed by Sewell’s long-time lawyer, Matthew Hopkins, who has himself posted antisemitic and racist views online.
Despite claiming to have disbanded, neo-Nazis of the NSN have continued to meet in person throughout this year, including under the banner of the March for Australia anti-immigration rallies they helped organise around the country.
Last week, Sewell and other senior NSN figures admitted they had also continued with their plans to form a neo-Nazi political party, submitting the paperwork to register the “White Australia” party – with Sewell as party president – to the Australian Electoral Commission on Anzac Day.
On Friday, hours before the group’s midnight designation as a hate group, Sewell posted a video, which he said he hoped was not his final address.
“If our High Court injunction fails, then the fate of liberal democracy dies with the fate of white Australia, and you will be able to say to your grandchildren you were present when honorable men tried the peaceful method of resisting a government that is hell-bent on the destruction of our people,” he said.
Elsewhere online, prominent neo-Nazis told followers to research US neo-Nazi terror group the Order, which the NSN lionises, as their political options “dried up”. “Democracy is dead,” wrote one former NSN member. “Act accordingly.”
A new Telegram channel set up by the NSN in recent weeks, called Australian Vanguard, shut down on Friday as the news of the proscribing broke. Before it went dark, the channel warned that if all legal and political avenues were exhausted, “what avenues do [the government] think realistically remain? Do they think whites will submit?”
In January, this masthead revealed the extent of the NSN’s entanglement with terrorists and extremist groups overseas, and uncovered a secret chatroom run by March for Australia organisers and the NSN where an alleged $10,000 plot to kidnap Prime Minister Anthony Albanese, along with other threats, had led to multiple police raids.
The NSN’s political push – as revealed by this masthead in April – is part of its broader efforts to rebrand as “everyday Australians” concerned about immigration in order to recruit followers and use political expression as a shield against hate speech laws.
In outlawing the group on Friday, the home affairs minister noted the NSN’s involvement in violence, including an alleged attack on women and elderly people at an Indigenous camp in Melbourne last year, over which more than a dozen members, including Sewell, now face charges.
The federal government has also designated fundamental Islamist group Hizb ut-Tahrir as a hate group under the new laws, again at the recommendation of spy agency ASIO.
Since the NSN formally disbanded, Sewell has increasingly appeared on far-right manfluencer podcasts online, including alongside designated terrorist James Mason.
Some right-wing associates of the neo-Nazis said they were seeking legal advice about the proscribing on Friday, and March for Australia lead organiser Bec Freedom wiped her group’s main Telegram chat.
https://www.theage.com.au/national/democracy-is-dead-act-accordingly-neo-nazis-launch-high-court-fight-20260518-p5zyex.html
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d0bc64 No.24618478
>>24505916 (pb)
Pilot Daniel Duggan appeals decision to extradite him to US for allegedly training Chinese military personnel
A former US marine pilot accused of illegally training Chinese military personnel is appealing a court decision that paves the way for his extradition.
Adelaide Lang - 18 May 2026
A former US fighter pilot is appealing a decision that greenlit his extradition over claims he illegally trained Chinese military personnel.
Daniel Duggan was arrested at the behest of the US government in 2022 at a supermarket in regional NSW, where he lived with his wife Saffrine and their six children.
He has been in custody for three and a half years - nearly half in solitary confinement - over claims he breached US arms trafficking laws by training Chinese pilots in South Africa between 2010 and 2012.
Mr Duggan denies the allegations and has for years resisted attempts to return him to the US to face charges, most recently in the Federal Court.
But the former fighter pilot’s appeal against the decision to approve his extradition was struck down in April.
Saffrine Duggan announced on Monday the family had lodged a challenge against the Federal Court decision.
“(We) will be continuing in our fight for Dan’s freedom and Australia’s sovereignty,” she said on Instagram.
“This is about my family and all Australians.”
The appeal will be heard by the Full Federal Court at a later date.
Ms Duggan argued then-attorney general Mark Dreyfus approved her husband’s extradition to the US despite him being an Australian citizen who “broke no law” while working in South Africa in 2012.
Mr Duggan had no criminal record or violent history but had been locked up for years without facing any Australian charges, she said.
The former US marine pilot has been kept in a maximum security prison in central NSW, about 100km from his family since his arrest.
Ms Duggan repeated her calls for the government to intervene in her husband’s case as she prepares for the next stage in the family’s fight against extradition.
“It’s time for Dan to come home,” she said.
In a letter from prison, Mr Duggan previously wrote that he believed his activities were not illegal, and Australian and US intelligence services were aware of his work.
His years-long legal battle has taken a crippling financial toll on his family, who estimate their legal bills total about $500,000.
Mr Duggan has been refused Legal Aid, while an injunction placed on his family’s half-built house means they can neither sell it nor live in it.
“We have been stripped of our property and we have been financially devastated by our ongoing fight for justice,” Ms Duggan said.
https://thenightly.com.au/australia/pilot-daniel-duggan-appeals-decision-to-extradite-him-to-us-for-allegedly-training-chinese-military-personnel-c-22298697
https://www.instagram.com/reel/DYdVXeBvJV1/
https://chuffed.org/project/109154-dan-duggan-extradition-legal-fund
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d0bc64 No.24621694
YouTube embed. Click thumbnail to play.
>>24556451 (pb)
>>24611802
Malcolm Turnbull lashes AUKUS as ‘a huge wealth transfer’, tells UK its submarine industry is ‘in disarray’
Former Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull has unloaded on the AUKUS agreement, telling his UK audience that their own naval shipbuilding and submarine industry is in ‘absolute disarray’.
Andrew Greene - 18 May 2026
1/2
Former Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull has unloaded on the AUKUS agreement during a presentation in London, telling his UK audience that their own naval shipbuilding and submarine industry is in “absolute disarray”.
Appearing at the leading international affairs think tank Chatham House, Mr Turnbull has also predicted China will not launch a military invasion of Taiwan, with President Xi Jinping instead hoping to takeover the island “without fighting”.
During a wide-ranging discussion on foreign policy and Australia’s role in the world, the one-time Liberal leader who left politics in 2018 was asked about his concerns towards the AUKUS deal which was unveiled by his successor Scott Morrison in 2021.
Under AUKUS, Australia is expected to acquire at least three Virginia-class boats from the United States in the 2030s which will operate from Perth’s HMAS Stirling ahead of the arrival of a new fleet known as SSN-AUKUS being delivered with the UK in the 2040s.
To help ensure the delivery of the Virginia-class and SSN-AUKUS boats, Australian taxpayers are providing billions of dollars to the United States and United Kingdom to improve their domestic submarine building capacity.
“I worry we won’t get any submarines. It’s a submarine deal with no submarines,” Mr Turnbull told the Royal Institute of International Affairs, describing AUKUS as a “really stupid deal”.
“The UK ship building industry, particularly the submarine industry is in absolute disarray,” he warned.
“It’s a great deal for the UK. Why? Because they get lots of money from Australia so essentially, I think is a huge wealth transfer from the Australian government to the US and the UK.”
“America’s getting a base. We could argue that’s good for our security, you could argue it’s not. The UK is getting lots of lovely money. Again, what I’m saying about the problems with the UK submarine industrial base is not controversial.”
Last month British MPs warned that the UK’s contribution towards delivering the massive AUKUS nuclear submarine project was falling behind, highlighting “shortfalls or delays in funding”.
Although the Labour chaired House of Commons defence committee was broadly supportive of AUKUS, it also “laid bare the scale of the endeavour that will be required to deliver it”.
“For the UK, delivering SSN-AUKUS will be a lengthy and complex undertaking requiring a sustained financial commitment from government across several electoral cycles,” the British report warned.
(continued)
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d0bc64 No.24621696
>>24621694
2/2
Mr Turnbull also predicted the US would not be able to reach the goal of producing at least two new submarines a year by the 2030s, a milestone needed before it would be prepared to transfer any of its existing Virginia-class boats to Australia. “You’re talking about a vertical take-off which of course isn’t going to happen. So, I don’t think we’ll get any Virginias. I don’t think we can complain because the Americans will say, ‘We’ve been completely upfront with you’.”
In 2021 former Prime Minister Scott Morrison unveiled the AUKUS partnership with his then British and US counterparts after cancelling a French project favoured by Mr Turnbull, to replace Australia’s ageing Collins-class submarines.
China has consistently attacked the AUKUS partnership between Australia, the United Kingdom and the United States, which was designed to counter Beijing’s growing military assertiveness in the Indo-Pacific.
When asked about the prospect of conflict involving China, Mr Turnbull noted that the US had historically been “very concerned” to protect Taiwan but didn’t see any imminent threat to Australia.
“Look, I don’t see China invading Australia for a start. I’m not lying awake at night worried about you know, some sort of kinetic attack from China”.
“Ten years on, is China in a better position to forcibly take Taiwan than it was? Yeah. No, question. No one would argue with that. Is it likely to? No, I don’t think it is.”
“My view is that (Chinese President) Xi Jinping wants to reunite Taiwan with the mainland without force. He wants to win without fighting and I think that is quite feasible”.
“China’s military capabilities have been considerably enhanced, uh, you know, through their investment. They now have a navy that is bigger than that of the United States. They’ve got a ship building industry that is several hundred times bigger than the United States.”
https://thenightly.com.au/politics/malcom-turnbull-lashes-aukus-as-a-huge-wealth-transfer-tells-uk-its-submarine-industry-is-in-disarray-c-22299408
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9cfJdJqZt3U
https://www.chathamhouse.org/2026/05/malcolm-turnbull-aukus-huge-wealth-transfer-australian-government-us-and-uk
https://www.chathamhouse.org/events/all/standard-event/australian-model-navigating-us-china-divide-malcolm-turnbull
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d0bc64 No.24621702
>>24599846
>>24611802
Australia’s $11billion upgrade to keep subs afloat waiting for AUKUS
James Massola and Brittany Busch - May 19, 2026
Australia’s ageing Collins-class submarines will receive $11 billion worth of upgrades starting next month, as the navy extends their lifespan while waiting for the arrival of its first nuclear submarines from the United States.
The Collins-class submarines, which have had a troubled history over their lifetime, have to be upgraded because the first of the US-built Virginia-class nuclear-powered submarines are not due to arrive until about 2032, and senior Trump administration and Pentagon figures have aired reservations about the pact with Australia and Britain.
Last month, a UK parliament review expressed grave reservations about whether Britain was capable of building Australia’s bespoke SSN-AUKUS class submarines by the early 2040s, noting that “cracks are already beginning to show when it comes to funding”.
Earlier this month, as Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi visited Australia, former senior defence official Richard Gray urged the federal government to consider leasing conventional diesel submarines from Japan as a plan B to avoid a capability gap.
There is also concern within government that despite US President Donald Trump’s endorsement of the submarine pact last year, there are key figures within the administration, such as Defence undersecretary Elbridge Colby, who have opposed the deal.
Defence Minister Richard Marles criticised the former Coalition government for estimating, in its 2020 force structure plan, that the cost of the life-of-type extensions to the Collins boats would be about $6 billion, rather than the more realistic $11 billion.
The need to extend the life of the Collins class has been reviewed by successive governments and predates the decision to sign the AUKUS deal with the US and Britain.
Marles announced the extension on Tuesday. It will add up to 10 years to the boats’ lifespan, and will include cutting open the vessels in dry dock to upgrade critical weapons systems.
In 2024, the government flagged that it would extend the submarines’ lives for another decade, but it will now scale back the upgrades to what it calls “a conditions-based sustainment approach”.
“These decisions reaffirm the Albanese government’s commitment to keeping the Collins class a potent and highly capable strike and deterrent capability today, and for years to come,” Marles said during a speech to the Lowy Institute think tank.
“Extending the life of all six Collins-class submarines is critical to maintaining that edge as we transition the navy from conventional to nuclear-powered submarines.”
HMAS Farncomb, which is one of the oldest of the six submarines, will be the first boat to get an overhaul.
After the speech, Marles said it was “unthinkable” that Australia could be left without long-range submarine capability, and $368 billion AUKUS deal was the solution once the Collins-class submarines expired.
“We don’t really have a choice but to do this,” he told the audience during a question and answer session.I mean, to concede that Australia would not operate that platform would be to really reduce our sovereignty. It is far and away the most significant capability that we have
“There seems to be a sort of almost an incredulity about the idea that this could really happen, but the truth of the matter is that AUKUS is now being pursued with vigor by each of the three participating nations,” he said.
Australian Strategic Policy Institute senior fellow Richard Gray, who wrote the “Hedging our Bets” report on the Japanese submarine option, said announcement “means it will like take longer, cost more and deliver a reduced submarine capability”.
“It might seem unusual that the cost goes up so much, but that increase in cost is almost certainly due to greatly increased maintenance on largely unchanged boats.”
University of Western Australia adjunct professor Jennifer Parker said the upgrade was necessary but “the Collins will have reduced capability, they already do, and it will be used to train submariners for the Virginia class. Their [the Collins] ability to operate far from Australian shores will be diminished”.
https://www.theage.com.au/politics/federal/australia-s-11billion-upgrade-to-keep-subs-afloat-waiting-for-aukus-20260519-p5zyqp.html
https://www.defenceconnect.com.au/naval/18213-government-commits-to-collins-lote
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d0bc64 No.24621710
>>24603494
Frank Lowy tells Bondi inquiry his soccer fix could help cure hate
STEPHEN RICE - 19 May 2026
1/2
Billionaire businessman and Holocaust survivor Sir Frank Lowy has previously experienced violent antisemitism in his adopted country – once when a bomb exploded at the Israeli consulate in Westfield Towers, where he had his office, and again when another exploded at the Hakoah Club in Bondi, where he was president.
But nothing prepared him for the massacre of 15 people at Bondi Beach in December.
“I couldn’t believe that is happening to Australia – I used to go to Bondi Beach every morning to run on the beach,” Sir Frank tells The Australian in an exclusive interview.
“I still can’t believe it, but I must tell you that it didn’t happen overnight, so change is not going to be overnight.”
Change can happen, the Westfield shopping centre founder insists, in a powerful submission he has just handed the antisemitism royal commission – but it will require the same kind of cultural shift that saw ethnic divisions in Australian soccer transformed into loyalty to the country.
“In soccer, we didn’t try to take people’s ethnic identity away; we worked to stop the expression of ethnic conflict in public,” Sir Frank says in the submission.
“Similarly, it is probably not possible to eradicate a dislike of Jews, but it is possible to help people understand why, in Australian society, the public outpouring of this aversion is not right.”
Sir Frank, hand-picked by prime minister John Howard in 2002 to rescue soccer, broke up the ethnically divided structures that had encouraged violence in the game and established the A-League, bringing soccer – or football, as he prefers to call it – into the national mainstream.
“When I came to this country, I recognised its decency and the privileges it accorded me,” said Sir Frank, now 95. “I also recognised the obligations of living in a tolerant democracy. “There has been a drift away from these obligations and more should be made of them when people apply to live here. They should understand the penalties (up to deportation) for failing to demonstrate the values that have served Australia so well for decades.”
Stressing that deportation should only be a last resort, Sir Frank told The Australian that education had to be the first objective for migrants.
“There is a social contract, in my opinion, that when you come to Australia as an immigrant, you’ve got to learn the language, you adopt the Australian way of life,” he said.
“They have to adopt the country that they come to. If they love the country they came from so much, why didn’t they stay there?”
Sir Frank said he saw as a boy how quickly verbal violence in Europe mutated into the physical violence that took the life of his father and the lives of his mother’s entire family, leaving her the sole survivor.
“Now in my 90s, I heard the slogans shouted at the Opera House and then I heard the bullets find their target at Bondi Beach,” he said.
Sir Frank, who now lives in Israel, recalls that when he arrived in Australia his Jewishness was irrelevant. “When I came to Australia from Europe in 1952, I was called a New Australian, and I liked the title of New Australian because suddenly I belonged somewhere.
“When I heard about ‘mateship’ and ‘a fair go’, they represented noble national aspirations.
“You adopt the Australian way of life. If you don’t like Australia, well, leave.
“I was naturalised after a few years in Australia, and it was a major event that I am now an Australian. It gave me pride and I wanted that pride to be spread to the supporters of soccer.”
(continued)
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d0bc64 No.24621711
>>24621710
2/2
As a young man, Sir Frank became an office holder with Hakoah, the Jewish football club in Sydney, and says he “understood the fire that drove ethnic teams”.
“But I knew the game could not grow unless it became Australised, so to speak, because the foreign element was good, but it was destructive because the fights that occurred on the field distracted Aussies – in the real sense – from coming to the games.
“And of course, the fights of Europe were brought to Australia. And I knew that unless you make major changes to the perception of the game, the game will remain a minor game in Australia. And I’m not a minor game person.
“We adopted a constitution that brought in new names – the clubs had to be called, not Croatia or Budapest, but Perth, Sydney, or a suburb of a city, to identify the game and the club with its environment.
“To bring back Australian decency we need cultural confidence,” Sir Frank says in his submission to the royal commission. “This can only be demonstrated by powerful and inspiring leadership from government.”
Sir Frank adroitly sidesteps a question from The Australian about whether Anthony Albanese had provided that kind of leadership, observing that “the Prime Minister is the leader of the country, so I respect him”.
But he strongly backs tough federal and state legislation against antisemitism, including moves by the NSW government to ban chants of “globalise the intifada”.
When antisemitism burst on to the forecourt of Sydney’s Opera House on October 9, 2023, Sir Frank says he was astonished.
“Australians were openly celebrating a massacre. Amplified by the powerful engine of social media, a new entitlement had emerged,” he said.
“The social licence that has allowed for the open expression of anti-Jewish sentiment needs to be reworked. If this helps to curb antisemitism, it will likely be useful in curbing other forms of racism in Australia.”
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation/frank-lowy-tells-bondi-inquiry-his-soccer-fix-could-help-cure-hate/news-story/4cbc117e31c70d63e86a8460f4e71af8
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation/frank-lowys-powerful-antisemitism-submission-we-changed-soccer-and-we-can-also-extinguish-smouldering-racism/news-story/4a05fcdff9f42c8a476f28630f91bcf4
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d0bc64 No.24621717
>>24583922 (pb)
Syrian government clears way for ISIS brides’ return to Australia
MOHAMMAD ALFARES - 19 May 2026
The remaining former ISIS brides and their children are expected to arrive in Australia as early as next week, with the Syrian government stepping in to unlock travel funds from their relatives and finalise flight arrangements needed for their departure.
The Australian has confirmed urgent negotiations are under way to extract six Australian women from northeast Syria’s al-Roj internment camp, which could see the remaining group return by next week.
Under direct pressure from the US State Department, the Syrian government and Kurdish authorities controlling the camps are understood to have come to an agreement for imminent and urgent repatriations.
It can also be revealed that Syrian officials quietly tried to pluck out the Australians this week but Kurdish authorities halted the transfer amid tensions over politically sensitive repatriations.
Sources with direct knowledge of the negotiations said the immediate focus had shifted to transferring funds set aside specifically to cover flights from Damascus to Australia, with approvals being sought to release the money and complete bookings.
The group had been expected to return to Australia as early as Tuesday night next week, coinciding with Eid al-Adha, the Islamic holiday commemorating sacrifice.
While diplomatic efforts continue, including involvement from the US, the timing remains contingent on the completion of travel arrangements.
One woman who is subject to an exclusion order imposed by the Albanese government is expected to remain in Syria. It’s not clear whether that woman has any children but 18 Australians remain trapped in the camp and all have passports.
Syrian authorities have effectively taken control of directing how and where payments linked to the travel of the Australians should be made because family members, government officials or helpers are not on the ground.
The Australian repatriation push comes after weeks of tension between Kurdish authorities controlling the camp and regional governments seeking to remove foreign nationals.
Sources described the delays as part of “hostage diplomacy”, with Kurdish authorities accused of using the transfers to extract international recognition before allowing departures to proceed.
The stalemate now appears to be easing, with recent discussions involving the US heaping pressure on Kurdish authorities to allow the Australians to leave. The return of the women and children now appears inevitable, sources have said.
It is unclear whether any of the women would face charges upon their arrival, but the AFP has previously said they would not rule out the possibility.
Three out of four brides who returned on May 7 were charged with historic crimes against humanity-related offences, and remain behind bars.
Melbourne grandmother Kawsar Abbas, 53, and her younger daughter Zeinab, 31, are expected to apply for bail in June after facing multiple slavery charges.
Another of Ms Abbas’s daughters, Zahra Ahmad, was released into the community and had not been charged with any offences after landing in Melbourne. It’s unclear whether she would undergo deradicalisation courses with the Victorian Board of Imams.
Sheik Mostafa Sarakibi previously told The Australian any counselling or interventions linked to countering violent extremism programs would need to be voluntary, unless a referral was made by police or the courts.
In Sydney, former nursing student and accused terrorist supporter Janai Safar was denied bail and remanded in custody despite claiming in court that separating her from her son would be “particularly traumatic” after spending years detained in Syria.
Kurdish authorities told The Australian the arrest of the three women initially sparked intense anxiety among the seven remaining brides at al-Roj, but they had been led to believe their group would fly together to Australia.
“They were told they could follow in the near future, and that the whole group would go together to Australia, not in separate groups,” camp director Hakmiyeh Ibrahim said. “The understanding was everyone would gather in Damascus first, and from Damascus the entire group would travel together to Australia.”
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation/syrian-government-clears-way-for-isis-brides-return-to-australia/news-story/695a12d5b1e8b56e1bacd8aa6ac37da1
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d0bc64 No.24621731
>>24474213 (pb)
>>24512269 (pb)
>>24536322 (pb)
SAS veteran who could send Ben Roberts-Smith to jail for life promised immunity from own battlefield ‘crimes’
The SAS ‘brother’ will testify against Ben Roberts-Smith and avoid jail for his own battlefield ‘crimes’.
Aaron Patrick - 21 APR 2026
1/3
Jason Peters used to say he loved Ben Roberts-Smith like a brother.
In recent days the former Special Air Service Regiment trooper, once his friend’s rival for the Victoria Cross, has emerged as the man who might send Mr Roberts-Smith to jail for life.
But as one of the lead prosecution witnesses, the veteran known as Person 4 will enter the witness box with a war record that both enhances and harms his credibility: he too is accused of murdering prisoners.
The allegation is not military or media gossip. It was made by the same barrister who convinced a Federal Court judge that Mr Roberts-Smith committed war crimes in Afghanistan, Nicholas Owens, now a judge in the same court.
“Your Honour, to be clear, we do allege that Person 4 is a murderer,” Mr Owens said during a defamation lawsuit in 2022.
Mr Peters, a pseudonym, will not go to jail for murder. Formal allegations tendered to court on Friday suggest he has been promised immunity for war crimes in return for testifying against Mr Roberts-Smith, who has been charged with five counts of war crimes — murder.
Federal prosecutors believe Mr Peters is a killer. He told them that on April 12, 2009, he executed a prisoner at a compound in southern Afghanistan that had been used by the Taliban to attack regular Australian soldiers, according to court documents.
Prosecutors will allege that after the building, known as Whiskey 108, was partially destroyed by a bomb dropped from a Western aircraft, a father and son were pulled from a tunnel.
The son, Ahmadullah Essa, who had one leg, was allegedly killed by Mr Roberts-Smith with a machine gun. Then “Roberts-Smith grabbed Mohammed Essa, placed him on his knees in front of Person 4, and said to Person 4, ‘Shoot that c..t,’” according to the allegations.
“Person 4, understanding this to be an order, shot Mohammad Essa in the head, killing him,” the 24-page document states. “Person 4 has admitted their role in this incident.”
Mr Roberts-Smith told a court in 2021 the allegations were “ridiculous” and he shot an insurgent running near a cornfield carrying a bolt-action rifle.
No excuse
Australian soldiers sent to Afghanistan received briefings from military lawyers that it was illegal to kill prisoners. Following orders is not an excuse under laws developed to prosecute Nazis and Japanese commanders after World War II.
Melanie O’Brien, a University of Western Australia law professor writing a book on war crimes in Afghanistan, said prosecutors should not protect soldiers who committed crimes to secure the convictions of their superiors.
“You can’t be acquitted because you carried out an unlawful order especially if you knew it was unlawful,” she said. “Our soldiers receive quite extensive training under the laws of war so they know they will not be allowed to execute someone who is unarmed and not a combatant.”
A lawyer who represented Mr Peters in Mr Roberts-Smith’s defamation lawsuit said revealing his identity “will knowingly potentially inflict severe harm”. Mr Peters was a witness for Nine, which Mr Roberts-Smith unsuccessfully sued in 2018 for accusing him of murder.
Mr Peters’ real name has not been made public, although the Australian War Memorial inadvertently published his first name in 2012.
A father of two, he describes himself as a farmer who was older than most of the SAS soldiers during the war. The greatest achievement of his military career was on June 11, 2010, when he attacked a machine-gun position in the village of Tizak with Mr Roberts-Smith and another SAS soldier known as Dean Roddan.
As the three men desperately fought three Taliban machine gunners and several firing assault rifles in the courtyard of a mosque, Mr Peters leaned out from behind a tree several times to protect Mr Roberts-Smith as he threw a grenade and charged the courtyard. Mr Peters followed and helped kill two men who had fled inside the mosque.
(continued)
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d0bc64 No.24621732
>>24621731
2/3
After the battle, all six SAS soldiers in the team posed for a group photo in front of six dead Afghans and their weapons. Mr Roberts-Smith was the only one who didn’t smile for the camera.
The corporal was recognised for his actions with a Victoria Cross, the highest medal for bravery. Mr Peters was initially passed over, a slight that left him “hurt and disappointed”, according to Anthony Besanko, the judge who oversaw the defamation case.
Three years later, after the army reviewed the battle, Mr Peters was awarded a Medal for Gallantry, the third-ranked bravery decoration.
Mr Peters has said that he was told by other SAS soldiers that he deserved the Victoria Cross, not Mr Roberts-Smith.
At an SAS barbecue in Perth in 2011, his wife approached the sergeant in charge of their team and demanded to know why her husband did not receive the venerated medal, according to court evidence.
The sergeant told her to “pull her neck in”, he said in court.
Second in charge
In between the fight at the Whiskey 108 compound and the belated decoration, the two men worked closely together. In 2012, they returned to Afghanistan as members of the same team, Gothic 2. Although Mr Roberts-Smith was still a corporal, he had been promoted to team leader, an influential position in the SAS. Mr Peters became his deputy.
They both preferred the Mk 14 Enhanced Battle Rifle to the special forces’ standard M4 assault rifle. Although the gun was much heavier, its large-calibre bullets inflicted far greater damage.
No evidence has emerged that Mr Peters asked to be assigned to a different team, or leave the SAS, after allegedly being ordered to execute Mohammad Essa.
He was present for the most notorious allegation against Mr Roberts-Smith — that the giant soldier kicked Ali Jan, a farmer, off a river embankment in the village of Darwan on September 11, 2012.
Mr Peters told the court that after the handcuffed man plunged down the slope, suffering facial injuries, he was dragged to a large tree by Mr Peters and another SAS soldier, who shot him. He said the murder was covered up by placing a two-way radio on his corpse to create the impression the dead man was a Taliban insurgent.
Mr Roberts-Smith said he shot a Taliban spotter who was found carrying a radio. “There was no kick,” he said in court. “I don’t remember seeing a cliff either.”
Investigators allege that six weeks after the Darwan incident, near the village of Syahchow, two Afghan prisoners were lined up on the edge of a cornfield and shot on Mr Roberts-Smith’s orders. To cover up the deaths, a grenade was allegedly thrown at their bodies.
Whether Mr Peters, the second-in charge, saw or heard anything is unclear from court papers filed in the murder case.
Mr Roberts-Smith denied he executed anyone at Syahchow.
No comment
In 2022, Mr Peters was asked in court what happened at Whiskey 108, the compound where the one-legged man died. “Your Honour, I object on the grounds that I may incriminate myself,” he told Justice Besanko.
Even when offered a deal that nothing he said could be used against him in other cases, including a murder trial, he refused to talk. The judge decided not to force him to answer questions, which meant Mr Roberts-Smith barrister, Arthur Moses, could not ask him if he killed anyone there.
Mr Moses suggested in court that Mr Peters might have agreed with Nine, the media company, to testify against Mr Roberts-Smith if he wasn’t asked about Whiskey 108.
“I will put to him directly that he has done a deal with the respondents in respect of this matter, and he has come here to give evidence about this point and wasn’t going to be the subject of having to be pressed to answer a question about whether he’s a murderer,” Mr Moses told the judge.
That was when Nine’s barrister, Mr Owens, took the unusual step of accusing his side’s witness of being a criminal.
“Your Honour, to be clear, we do allege that Person 4 is a murderer,” he said. “We say that he shot a PUC (person under control) at Whiskey 108, after Mr Roberts-Smith kicked that PUC to his knees and said, ‘Shoot him’.
“Of course, in the context of this proceeding, that accusation is made not directly in order to impugn Person 4. We make it because … we say that in the circumstances Mr Roberts-Smith was complicit in, and responsible for, that murder. So the murder that we allege against Person 4 is one that is an important building block in our case against Mr Roberts-Smith.”
(continued)
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d0bc64 No.24621733
>>24621732
3/3
Mr Peters left the Army in 2021 on medical grounds.
After telling his psychiatrist that he might hurt himself if required to give evidence, he was not forced to answer some questions about Whiskey 108. The five types of medicine he was being treated with were blocked from publication by a suppression order.
Immunity deals
Even his lawyer, Ben Kremer, told the court he might have broken the law at Darwan by not protecting Mr Jan.
“And not all steps were taken, or no steps may have been taken, so that there is (criminal) liability engaged or responsibility engaged on behalf of the person with effective authority, that is, the 2IC over the member of the troop,” Dr Kremer told the court.
As for Mr Peters, he said in court his bravery at Tizak, when both men stormed the Taliban courtyard, was equal to Mr Roberts-Smith’s. The other soldier received the Victoria Cross because “we lost a lot of people and they wanted a good news story”.
Asked by Mr Moses if the medal “has caused you to deeply resent Mr Roberts-Smith?” he answered: “I loved him as a brother.”
Three other SAS veterans have been promised legal protection to testify against Mr Roberts-Smith. One was a medic in the Battle of Tizak. The other was a member of his team at Darwan. The third executed a prisoner at Syahchow, according to investigators.
“Each of these witnesses has admitted their personal involvement in executing one or more detainees at the direction or with the complicity of ROBERTS-SMITH,” the written allegations state. “In each instance, ROBERTS-SMITH was their military superior. These witnesses have provided written accounts of their actions. Each details other murders they witnessed.”
Which may lead Australians to ask: how do you get away with murder in war?
https://thenightly.com.au/australia/i-loved-him-as-a-brother-the-sas-veteran-who-could-send-ben-roberts-smith-to-jail-for-life-c-22167248
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d0bc64 No.24621748
>>24621731
COMMENTARY: Soldiers’ cases expose critical weaknesses in Australian law
CHRIS MERRITT - April 24, 2026
1/2
The real lesson from the Ben Roberts-Smith case is now apparent: this country’s flawed attempt to deal with war crimes has demolished the idea that everyone in the military is accountable to the law.
The goal of dealing with war crimes through the civilian justice system has created a monster that guarantees some war criminals – and their commanders – will never be held to account.
The most tangible evidence of this is that four former soldiers who admit they executed prisoners in Afghanistan have now been granted immunity from prosecution by the Commonwealth Director of Public Prosecutions in return for giving evidence against Roberts-Smith.
Grants of immunity are exceptional in criminal justice – and for good reason.
In 1889, when AV Dicey was Vinerian professor of English law at Oxford, he identified one of the great, enduring principles of English law that has been inherited by this country. He wrote that the rule of law encompasses “equality before the law or the equal subjection of all classes to the ordinary law of the land administered by the ordinary law courts”.
Some have mistakenly asserted that the prosecution of Roberts-Smith, this country’s most decorated living soldier, proves this principle of legal equality is well-respected in Australian law.
It proves the reverse.
This country’s method of dealing with war crimes has a two-stage system that offers some war criminals a path to impunity, it significantly impedes the pursuit of those in command positions and, because of that, it has left the door open for intervention by the International Criminal Court.
The decision by the four men to voluntarily attest to their role in killing prisoners might initially seem puzzling.
After all, nobody in the justice system – police, prosecutors or judges – could have forced them to give evidence against themselves.
But the war crimes system is more than that. It includes Paul Brereton’s non-judicial inquiry into allegations of wrongdoing.
Because Brereton, who reported in 2020, was running an administrative inquiry for the military, he was effectively equipped with coercive power.
Those who refused to make incriminating admissions could be charged with disobeying a lawful command. But in return for the destruction of their right to silence, they received a promise that their admissions would not be used against them in future proceedings.
Those promises, however, were not absolute.
While the Brereton admissions could not be used as evidence, the Australian Federal Police and the Office of the Special Investigator were free to use them to identify lines of inquiry and assemble evidence from other sources.
One way to head that off and avoid prosecution would be to do a second immunity deal – this time with the DPP – and that is what appears to have happened.
So instead of facing prosecution and a possible life sentence, four killers will be free – regardless of the outcome of the case against Roberts-Smith.
The problems with this system do not end there.
The federal law on war crimes has been drafted in a way that protects senior officers who, had international law prevailed, could have been prosecuted because they should have known about the alleged misdeeds of those on the frontline.
This has been highlighted by Melanie O’Brien, of the University of Western Australia, and barrister Louise Clegg.
They have both pointed to the fact that Australia’s federal law on command responsibility differs from the wording of the Rome Statute, a treaty ratified by Australia that outlines how the International Criminal Court deals with war crimes.
Section 268.115 of the Commonwealth Criminal Code is derived from a provision in the Rome Statute that covers the legal responsibility of commanders.
But the Australian version has eliminated a section that would have imposed liability on commanders if they “should have known” about wrongdoing on the battlefield.
This preserves the precision of the Criminal Code. But it exposes this country to a new risk, as outlined in a 2022 critique of the war crimes provisions that was published in the Melbourne Journal of International Law.
“Australian law uses language that is potentially much more forgiving for superiors who fail to detect or investigate war crimes than the international law, and therefore could put Australia at odds with its obligations under international criminal law,” wrote legal academics Emily Crawford and Aaron Fellmeth.
(continued)
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d0bc64 No.24621749
>>24621748
2/2
This matters because if Australia declines to pursue commanders who “should have known” war crimes were taking place, and instead continues to focus on frontline troops, there is a risk that this could be viewed as proof this country is unable or unwilling to pursue its responsibilities under the Rome Statute.
And that is the trigger for direct involvement by the International Criminal Court.
Now that four men have admitted prisoners were executed in Afghanistan, the risk to those who were in command is growing.
There has also been little zeal so far in pursuing another category of military decision makers: the lawyers.
When Brereton produced his report, it found a culture of cover-ups so most of the media focused on the involvement of frontline forces.
They should have paid more attention to what this former judge of the NSW Court of Appeal had to say about military lawyers – some of whom clearly forgot their professional ethics required them to tell the army what it might not wish to hear.
Brereton’s report contains allegations that legal officers engaged in “embellishment” or “legal whitewashing” of operational reports.
Some lawyers lost sight of the fact their ultimate client was the commonwealth of Australia, not the deployed forces, individual soldiers or commanding officers.
Three years ago, Brereton’s assessment of military lawyers prompted the Journal of International Criminal Justice to write: “The impression given is that LOs (legal officers) who attempted to push back on these practices did not last long, while others either remained ignorant to the practices or indeed enabled them by perpetuating the use of ‘boilerplate’ language.”
One former military lawyer, David McBride, has been prosecuted. But he went to prison in 2024 not because he covered up misconduct. McBride was jailed because he leaked documents that revealed misconduct.
Chris Merritt is vice-president of the Rule of Law Institute of Australia.
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/commentary/soldiers-cases-expose-critical-weaknesses-in-australian-law/news-story/5524b51935dd69d9ec5c5e55ea0b1ffc
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d0bc64 No.24621758
>>24621731
>>24621748
COMMENTARY: Soldiers granted immunity to testify against Roberts-Smith now risk ICC prosecution
CHRIS MERRITT - May 07, 2026
1/2
When Ben Roberts-Smith eventually faces his war crimes trial in Sydney, four other former soldiers could be in for a nasty surprise.
They have been given immunity from prosecution in return for giving evidence they were complicit, with Roberts-Smith, in unlawful killings during the Afghanistan war.
But while the Commonwealth Director of Public Prosecutions is content to see these four killers go free, that is not the end of the story.
Their immunity deals cannot prevent the International Criminal Court from launching its own investigation. And because they have provided statements outlining their involvement, it is difficult to see how the ICC can turn a blind eye to Australia’s refusal to bring them to justice.
Nobody should be affronted if this international court decides to investigate these four men despite their immunity deal.
That is exactly what the Howard government signed up for when it ratified a treaty in 2002 known as the Rome Statute.
That treaty empowers the ICC to investigate and prosecute war crimes when nations party to that treaty are unable or unwilling to do so. Australia has fulfilled that condition.
What these men have said about Roberts-Smith has yet to be tested, and jurors will make up their own minds about how much weight to place on testimony that is part of their immunity deal.
But the admissions about their own conduct leave no room for doubt. They engaged in unlawful killings and Australia is unwilling to bring them to justice.
The ICC has clearly stated that domestic grants of immunity have no effect on its jurisdiction over war crimes.
This was spelled out by the court’s Pre-Trial Chamber in 2019 in a case involving Saif Al-Islam Gaddafi, son of the late Libyan dictator Muammar Gaddafi, who claimed he was the beneficiary of an amnesty.
“There is a strong, growing, universal tendency that grave and systematic human rights violations – which may amount to crimes against humanity by their very nature – are not subject to amnesties or pardons under international law,” the Pre-Trial Chamber said.
In 2009, before Lorraine Finlay became Australia’s Human Rights Commissioner, she took a similar view.
Finlay wrote in the University of California Davis Journal of International Law and Policy that allowing states to shield people from prosecution by the ICC “would make a mockery of the system of international criminal justice”.
If the ICC does take an interest in Australia’s refusal to bring these men to justice it could turn the Roberts-Smith case on its head.
The Victoria Cross winner has denied any wrongdoing and if a jury agrees, the rule against double jeopardy would place him beyond the reach of the ICC.
But regardless of the outcome, the fate of the four men who intend to give evidence against him will be up to the ICC’s prosecutor, British barrister Karim Asad Ahmad Khan KC, who is on leave over allegations of sexual misconduct.
If a jury sides with Roberts-Smith and Khan decides to investigate, the tables would be turned: Australia’s most decorated living soldier would be free and his four accusers would be at risk of prosecution and life in prison.
At that point, the Albanese government would have little choice but to become involved.
(continued)
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d0bc64 No.24621759
>>24621758
2/2
In 2002, when the Howard government ratified the Rome Statute, it introduced legislation giving the federal attorney-general a veto on whether to arrest those who are sought by the ICC.
So If Khan wants those four men, Attorney-General Michelle Rowland would be in the hot seat.
The Commonwealth Director of Public Prosecutions, which is part of Rowland’s portfolio responsibilities but acts independently, has already decided they should not be prosecuted.
If the ICC takes an interest in them, Australia’s reputation would be on line.
Would this country decide, for a second time, that they should not face justice over unlawful killings during wartime?
If Khan is held at bay, how would this square with the Attorney-General’s decision in April to sign off on the DPP’s proposal to prosecute Roberts-Smith?
When Australia ratified the Rome Statute, former Attorney-General Daryl Williams told parliament the ICC represented the international community’s determination to put an end to impunity for the perpetrators of the most serious crimes.
“Australia has a hard-won reputation as a champion of human rights and should throw its weight behind a court that will bring to justice the perpetrators of the most heinous international crimes,” Williams said.
He was right. Without the ICC as a fallback, this country would need to come to terms with the fact that impunity blights the civilian system we have put in place to deal with war crimes.
The United States has taken a different course. That country signed the Rome Statute in 2000 but Bill Clinton, who was President at the time, did not send the treaty to the US senate for ratification.
Two years later his successor, George W. Bush, disavowed the Rome Statute in line with longstanding efforts to keep US forces subject only to American law.
The US Congress went further and enacted legislation that the four men in the Roberts-Smith case might one day find relevant. It is known, at least unofficially, as The Hague Invasion Act.
It empowers US Presidents to use “all means necessary and appropriate to bring about the release of any US or allied personnel being detained or imprisoned by, on behalf of, or at the request of the International Criminal Court” which is based at The Hague in the Netherlands.
Chris Merritt is vice-president of the Rule of Law Institute of Australia.
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/commentary/soldiers-granted-immunity-to-testify-against-robertssmith-now-risk-icc-prosecution/news-story/81d19061b46b35f7d632f187e4a750a8
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d0bc64 No.24621767
>>24617218
Institutional abuse victims call for closure of legal 'loophole' in Queensland
Stephen Clarke -19 April 2026
Queensland's Labor opposition will introduce a private member's bill to parliament seeking to close a "loophole" that it says is "protecting paedophiles and the institutions that gave them power".
In 2024, a High Court decision found the Catholic Church was not vicariously liable for the actions of a paedophile priest because he was not an 'employee'. His work arrangements were only similar to employment.
Since that decision the ACT and Victoria have passed legislation expanding the liability of churches, sporting groups and other organisations to include the actions of paedophiles.
Legislation has also been introduced in Western Australia, but has been delayed after upper house MPs could not agree on how far the law should reach.
Shadow attorney-general Meaghan Scanlon said the Queensland government needed to "stand with victims".
"It's been over a year since this High Court decision and yet the Crisafulli government has failed to do anything," she said.
'Pathway to justice'
Diane Carpenter was a ward of the state from the age of four until she turned 18 in an orphanage near Rockhampton.
She said she was eight years old when she was sexually abused by a priest.
"For all survivors, this is what we want," she said.
"What this means to us is that everybody deserves a pathway to justice."
Fellow abuse survivor Val Cooper said she was robbed of her childhood.
"I'm here as an adult. I'm safe, I feel safe. I have choices. As a child, I wasn't," she said.
"I was busy surviving while others were laughing and playing. I carried fear, sadness and responsibilities that were never meant for a child, and that part of me is still there and [it's] tired."
"So when legislation comes along an says 'no', do you know what that does to survivors? It just kills you."
Shadow attorney-general Meaghan Scanlon said Queensland survivors "deserve their day in court".
"Their trauma isn't different depending on whether the offender was an employee or a priest or a volunteer," she said.
"Their pain is the same, and that institution who put that person in power should be held to account.
Premier David Crisafulli said a recent High Court ruling "might very well close that loophole".
"Right across the board people have said it needs to be cleared up at a federal level."
https://www.abc.net.au/news/2026-04-19/queensland-abuse-legal-loophole/106581110
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d0bc64 No.24625646
YouTube embed. Click thumbnail to play.
>>24379483 (pb)
>>24416011 (pb)
>>24416043 (pb)
Former governor-general Peter Hollingworth dies after a long illness
JOHN FERGUSON and JAMIE WALKER - May 19, 2026
1/2
Former governor-general and archbishop Peter Hollingworth, who resigned from the vice-regal role over his mishandling of child sex abuse in the church, died on Tuesday after a protracted period of ill health.
Dr Hollingworth, aged 91, was a retired Anglican archbishop who rose to prominence as a powerful advocate for the disadvantaged, principally through his role as the long-term head of the Brotherhood of St Laurence.
He was Australia’s most prominent social justice spokesman during the 1970s and 1980s.
Dr Hollingworth rose to become governor-general in 2001 but the appointment during the Howard government was short-lived, becoming mired in controversy over child sex abuse within the church while he was Archbishop of Brisbane.
Friends and family of the late church leader want Dr Hollingworth’s many achievements in social justice to be remembered.
His death will inevitably reignite debate about his handling of abuse within the church from 1989 until 2001.
He was governor-general from 2001 to 2003 and was 1991 Australian of the Year.
While leading the Brotherhood of St Laurence, Dr Hollingworth wrote a scathing front-page open letter published in The Age newspaper that accused the Hawke Labor government of failing children living in poverty. It contributed to the government formulating a family policy for the 1987 election campaign and to then prime minister Bob Hawke declaring: “By 1990, no Australian child will be living in poverty.”
This open battle with a Labor prime minister became the defining positive issue of his public life.
Anglican Church primate Mark Short remembered Dr Hollingworth’s commitment to justice.
“In reflecting on Bishop Hollingworth’s career I am reminded both of God’s call to do justice and speak for the vulnerable, and the harm caused when as leaders of God’s church we fall short of that calling,’’ he said.
“I encourage us to pray for Bishop Hollingworth’s family and to pray for all survivors of abuse, recognising that in Jesus we have a Lord who holds us to account and a saviour who is abundant in grace and mercy.’’
Dr Hollingworth’s rhetoric on abuse within the church while archbishop and then governor-general was at times judged as clumsy and hurtful, his friends arguing he was placed in a job that did not necessarily fit his skills set.
When he took over the Anglican Church in Brisbane, Dr Hollingworth became bogged down in the fight by lawyers and insurers to save the church’s coffers.
(continued)
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d0bc64 No.24625649
>>24625646
2/2
Dr Hollingworth was born in Adelaide in 1935, moved to Melbourne and was ordained in 1960. The church became his true love, sustaining him through more than two decades of controversy at the end of his life.
He met his wife Ann – who died six years ago – while still on national service and they married in 1960.
The Hollingworths have three daughters, Deborah, Fiona and Sarah, and four grandchildren, according to the office of the official secretary to the Governor-General.
In 2023, the Anglican Professional Standards Board in Melbourne made a series of negative findings against Dr Hollingworth that included allowing an offender to remain in ministry despite knowing the offender had sexually assaulted a child.
The Anglican Church of Southern Queensland said in a statement it acknowledged “with deep regret the past failings of the church”.
“Anglican Church of Southern Queensland apologises unreservedly to those who have suffered abuse, distress, isolation, and harm caused by the Church’s failure to respond with integrity and care when it was needed most,’’ it said.
After a five-year inquiry process, the Anglican Diocese of Melbourne was told that there would be no “unacceptable” risk of harm if Dr Hollingworth were to assist with local parish duties and play a role at services at St Paul’s Cathedral, the faith’s heartland in Victoria.
Dr Hollingworth was asked to apologise to two victims and was reprimanded by the national church leadership and his Melbourne leader over his decision to keep in mission the late sex abusers John Elliot and Donald Shearman while Dr Hollingworth was archbishop of Brisbane.
Dr Hollingworth acknowledged in 2023 that the board had found against him on six matters and had dismissed three other matters, adding that he knew he had erred.
“I made mistakes and I cannot undo them,” he said. “But I committed no crimes. There is no evidence that there was any abuse because of any decisions I made, or did not make.”
Dr Hollingworth was not an abuser but was exposed for bungling his handling of the crisis, accused of putting the church ahead of victims.
His critics argued there was enough evidence already on the record that suggested he should have been defrocked, wrongly blaming victim Beth Heinrich for encouraging offending against her.
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation/former-governorgeneral-peter-hollingworth-dies-after-a-long-illness/news-story/cdc2b186845df9bc5d9054feef1107f2
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ohkn2cWv8jo
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d0bc64 No.24625667
YouTube embed. Click thumbnail to play.
>>24625646
Peter Hollingworth, former governor-general of Australia and retired Anglican bishop, dies aged 91
Ciara Jones - 19 May 2026
1/2
Retired Anglican bishop and former governor-general Peter Hollingworth, who resigned in 2003 amid controversy over his handling of child abuse in the church, has died, aged 91.
Born in Adelaide in 1935 and raised in Melbourne, Dr Hollingworth was ordained in 1960 after studying theology.
Once described as "Australia's foremost spokesman for social justice", he joined the Brotherhood of St Laurence in 1964, serving 25 years with the Anglican welfare agency, including as executive director.
He was an outspoken critic of national welfare policy, arguing that poverty should be looked at "in terms of the structure of society, rather than the individual case"
In 1984, the clergyman famously clashed with former prime minister Bob Hawke after publishing a scathing open letter in which he accused the Labor government of failing to tackle child poverty.
Dr Hollingworth was named 1991 Australian of the Year and was recognised with an Order of the British Empire and an Order of Australia for his contributions to the community welfare sector..
Anglican Archbishop of Brisbane Jeremy Greaves confirmed to the ABC that Dr Hollingworth died in Melbourne on Tuesday morning.
In a statement, Archbishop Greaves said while he noted Dr Hollingworth's achievements, he also acknowledged with "deep regret the past failings of the Church".
"Anglican Church of Southern Queensland apologises unreservedly to those who have suffered abuse, distress, isolation, and harm caused by the Church's failure to respond with integrity and care when it was needed most," Archbishop Greaves said.
Archbishop Greaves said as he reflected on Dr Hollingworth's "complicated legacy", he was reminded of his "own frailty and capacity for sin".
"And I am thankful that, as we all seek to be Christ’s followers, we are offered the gift of grace that sustains us in the work we are called to do," he said in a letter to his clergy.
Bishop Mark Short wrote to his Anglican Church of Australia colleagues to inform them of Dr Hollingworth's death.
"In reflecting on Bishop Hollingworth's career, I am reminded both of God's call to do justice and speak for the vulnerable, and the harm caused when, as leaders of God's church, we fall short of that calling," he wrote in the letter.
"I encourage us to pray for Bishop Hollingworth's family and to pray for all survivors of abuse, recognising that in Jesus we have a Lord who holds us to account and a Saviour who is abundant in grace and mercy."
First and only cleric to serve as governor-general
Dr Hollingworth's steady rise through the Anglican hierarchy culminated in 1989 when he was elected the eighth Archbishop of Brisbane, overseeing 100 parishes.
He used his public profile to advocate for Indigenous rights, youth employment and the ordination of women.
After 11 years leading the Brisbane diocese, Dr Hollingworth was appointed the 23rd governor-general of Australia in 2001, the personal choice of then-prime minister John Howard.
He was the first and only cleric to serve in the vice-regal office.
Just six months into his term, Dr Hollingworth came under fire over allegations he failed to act on child sex abuse claims against Anglican clergy during his Brisbane tenure in the 1990s.
An Anglican church inquiry later found he failed to remove late paedophile priests Donald Shearman and John Elliot from the ministry, despite knowing they had sexually assaulted children.
(continued)
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d0bc64 No.24625671
>>24625667
2/2
Child abuse scandals
Beth Heinrich was abused as a teenage schoolgirl by Shearman in central-west New South Wales in the 1950s. She asked Dr Hollingworth for help to have the rector removed from the clergy, but he denied her requests, allowing Shearman to continue preaching until his retirement.
In a 2002 interview with the ABC's Australian Story, the then-governor-general suggested Ms Heinrich was the instigator: "My belief is that this was not sex abuse. There was no suggestion of rape or anything like that, quite the contrary. My information is that it was rather the other way round."
What went to air sparked calls for his sacking.
Dr Hollingworth always maintained his remarks were taken out of context. He later wrote to Ms Heinrich: "What happened to you as a girl was wrong and you were in no way responsible for it, I am deeply sorry for the words I used … that suggested otherwise."
In May 2003, Dr Hollingworth resigned as governor-general of Australia, citing the impact of "continuing public controversy" on his ability to "uphold the importance, dignity and integrity" of the high office.
'I have lived with my failures every day since'
In 2016, he testified at the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse and spoke directly to a victim-survivor, telling them he was "extremely sorry that the church and I failed to protect you".
The commission found Dr Hollingworth made a "serious error of judgement" in allowing John Elliot, who admitted to abusing two boys, to continue in the ministry.
It also ruled that the former Archbishop of Brisbane failed to take into account a psychiatrist's advice that Elliot was an "untreatable" paedophile who posed a risk of re-offending.
Dr Hollingworth accepted the findings and apologised, stating: "I made mistakes and I cannot undo them … but I committed no crimes."
He argued he was "ill-equipped" to deal with child abuse and was heavily influenced by the advice of lawyers and insurance companies.
"I say that as a matter of context, not as an excuse," Dr Hollingworth said. "I have lived with my failures every day since."
Holy orders retained
In 2023, the Professional Standards Board of the Anglican Church ruled Dr Hollingworth should not be defrocked, despite finding he committed misconduct.
He faced sustained criticism and calls to relinquish his $357,732 taxpayer-funded vice-regal pension and entitlements.
He was also named in several complaints to the Anglican diocese of Melbourne over his continuing status as a bishop in the church.
In 2023, Dr Hollingworth announced he would cease practising as an Anglican priest and surrender his permission to officiate to "end distress" for survivors, though he retained his holy orders.
He is survived by his three daughters and four grandchildren. His wife Ann died in 2021.
https://www.abc.net.au/news/2026-05-19/former-governor-general-peter-hollingworth-dies/106554086
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DoB0JQlHGho
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d0bc64 No.24625694
>>24625646
>>24625667
Death of former governor-general Peter Hollingworth sparks difficult feelings for church child abuse victim
Ned Hammond and Will Murray - 20 May 2026
1/2
The death of former governor-general Peter Hollingworth has attracted polarised reactions with former prime minister John Howard praising his "strong Christian faith" and an abuse survivor saying he was a "sad example of a man".
Dr Hollingworth, who was appointed as governor-general by Mr Howard in 2001, spent 11 years leading the Brisbane diocese of the Anglican church before becoming the first and only cleric to serve in the vice-regal office.
Just six months into his term, Dr Hollingworth came under fire over allegations he failed to act on child sex abuse claims against Anglican clergy during his Brisbane tenure in the 1990s.
For decades Beth Heinrich has spoken of how the then-archbishop's mishandling of her case compounded her suffering.
"He was a sad example of a man, a priest, and he was given honours and awards I don't believe he deserved or earned," Ms Heinrich said.
Ms Heinrich was abused by an Anglican priest while a schoolgirl in the 1950s.
In 1995 she sought assistance from then-Archbishop Hollingworth to have her abuser, Donald Shearman, removed from the ministry.
Despite hearing evidence from Mr Shearman that he groomed Ms Heinrich as a 14-year-old and started abusing her at 15, Dr Hollingworth took no action against him.
In 2002, during his tenure as governor-general, Dr Hollingworth was questioned about his failure to act against Mr Shearman during an interview with the ABC.
"My belief is that this was not sex abuse," he said.
"There was no suggestion of rape or anything like that, quite the contrary. My information is that it was rather the other way round."
Ms Heinrich said the news of his death was sad for the Hollingworth family, but his comments were deeply distressing.
"He was a priest and a father of girls, and then he chose to vilify and victim blame me on national television," she said.
"How do you think I feel about him?"
Ms Heinrich said she was also hurt by the failure of Dr Hollingworth to meet with her personally while he was archbishop.
She said on one occasion she drove 20 hours from regional Victoria to Brisbane for an arranged meeting, only to be told the archbishop was "busy."
"If he had met with me that day and helped me, I would've gone on and had another chance at life," she said.
"Every time you get knocked back it's a repeat of abuse. And so, it's abuse on abuse, and it just grows."
In May 2003, Dr Hollingworth resigned as governor-general of Australia, citing the impact of "continuing public controversy" on his ability to "uphold the importance, dignity and integrity" of the high office.
An Anglican church inquiry found Dr Hollingworth failed to remove late paedophile priests Donald Shearman and John Elliot from the ministry, despite knowing they had sexually assaulted children.
He died in Melbourne on Tuesday, aged 91.
(continued)
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d0bc64 No.24625699
>>24625694
2/2
'Complex legacy'
Primate of the Anglican Church of Australia, Bishop Mark Short, said he recognised Dr Hollingworth left a "complex legacy".
"I acknowledge the work he did over so many years to advocate for social justice that really impacted lives and communities," he said.
"But I also need to recognise that during his time as Archbishop, he made some serious misjudgements when it came to responding to matters of abuse."
He said reflecting on Dr Hollingworth's career he was "reminded both of God's call to do justice and love mercy".
"I'm also reminded of the hurt that can occur when those of us in leadership fail to live up to the values we profess."
He said church leaders sometimes "sadly fall short" of that duty to do justice.
"I think sometimes the best tribute we can give to someone is to recall and live up to those values to which they aspired, even if they themselves sometimes sadly fell short of those values," he said.
"Leadership is about recognising and owning responsibility, and it's important that those of us in those senior positions do so for the sake of those we're called to serve."
Dr Hollingworth became the 21st governor-general of Australia in 2001, appointed at the personal decision of then-Prime Minister John Howard.
In a statement, Mr Howard said all of Dr Hollingworth's activities over the course of his life were sustained by his "strong Christian faith".
"None was more important, both as to the intensity of his commitment and results demonstrated, than the years he spent with the Brotherhood of St Laurence in Victoria: an Anglican inspired welfare organisation committed to helping the disadvantaged and, in particular, reducing poverty amongst children," Mr Howard said.
"Many believe that Hollingworth's work, both as its director, and more generally a member of the brotherhood, did more to shape national policy in the final decades of the 20th century than the advocacy of any other person."
Mr Howard credited Dr Hollingworth with pushing fellow former Prime Minister Bob Hawke — who Dr Hollingworth castigated for not doing enough to address the issue — to promise that no child would be living in poverty by 1990, but still took a swipe at his fellow former PM for what he called "a lack of realism".
He said he respected Dr Hollingworth's "personal integrity and strength in adverse situations".
"Regrettably, the controversy over his handling of sex abuse by clergy in the Archdiocese of Brisbane has coloured recent commentary about him," Mr Howard said.
"As someone who abhorred the sexual abuse of anyone — particularly children — in the Church or elsewhere, he addressed these issues in a candid manner, acknowledging his own failings.
"May he rest in peace."
In a statement, Governor-General Sam Mostyn extended her condolences to Dr Hollingworth's family.
"The governor-general notes the statement issued by the Anglican Archbishop of Brisbane Jeremy Greaves which acknowledged the hurt and distress experienced by some member of the Australian community," the statement read.
"Her thoughts are today also with them and their families."
Opposition leader Angus Taylor acknowledged Dr Hollingworth had a "complicated legacy" but that he had made a "significant contribution" to the country.
"He made a big contribution to this country and we should all reflect on that."
https://www.abc.net.au/news/2026-05-20/former-governor-general-peter-hollingworth-death-reactions/106700678
https://qresear.ch/?q=Beth+Heinrich
https://qresear.ch/?q=Peter+Hollingworth
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d0bc64 No.24628984
>>24478341 (pb)
>>24611825
'Very difficult for the world': Albanese sharpens criticism of Trump
Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said Donald Trump's ever-changing positions on the war were hurting economies, including Australia.
Cameron Carr - 20 May 2026
Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has described United States President Donald Trump’s approach to governing as "very difficult for the world" in remarking on Trump's foreign policy backflips.
Trump has come under criticism over his repeated shifts in peace deal deadlines with Iran, and the subsequent economic harms caused by the prolonged war in the Middle East.
Albanese on Wednesday morning described the ongoing war as "uncertain" and "volatile", telling ABC Radio Perth he was not privy to any intelligence as to when the conflict could end.
But he was more certain that Trump's ever-changing positions on the war are hurting economies, including Australia's.
"Two days ago, President Trump was saying he was going to bomb, yesterday he said he wasn’t going to bomb, this morning we awoke to him considering it again," Albanese said.
"It’s very difficult for the world, and we’re impacted by it, and inflation is rising right around the world, including in the United States, but we’re coming through this better than most countries."
It's not the first time Albanese has been critical of the US leader.
Hours before agreeing to a conditional two-week ceasefire last month, Trump posted on Truth Social that "a whole civilisation will die tonight, never to be brought back again".
In a television interview with Sky News Australia at the time, Albanese said language threatening civilian infrastructure and destruction was not appropriate. He warned that such statements cause international concern.
"We've said very clearly that the conduct of any conflict must be within international law and that provides for making sure that civilians — who aren't parties to the conflict — are given every protection possible," he said.
Global conflict impacting Australia
Treasurer Jim Chalmers has spoken of the impacts of the war in the Middle East and prolonged US-Iran negotiations as cause for concern.
Ahead of the May budget, Chalmers said last month it was "hostage" to decisions made in Washington.
One of the main global disruptions has been fuel supply, due to frequent closures of the Strait of Hormuz in the Arab Gulf, where 20 per cent of global oil ordinarily transits.
When asked about fuel supplies on Wednesday, Albanese said Australia had more petrol, jet fuel and diesel than on 28 February, when the United States and Israel attacked Iran.
It's not the first time he's used that line; it was first deployed in a fuel report in April.
"That is due to the hard work that we've put in place, but also the hard work of Australians who are doing the right thing, hoarding and taking more than people need has stopped," he said.
This year's federal budget, handed down last week, included a multi-billion-dollar fuel resilience package, including a $7.5 billion fuel and fertiliser security facility and a $3.2 billion Australian fuel security reserve.
The package is designed to facilitate at least 50 days of onshore fuel supply and storage of diesel and aviation fuel.
Australia has also been ramping up its efforts to secure fuel supplies, with an additional three spot-market diesel cargoes secured in May.
https://www.sbs.com.au/news/article/albanese-criticises-trumps-actions-in-middle-east/60tn9hiof
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d0bc64 No.24628989
>>24611802
‘Marquee project’ on underwater vehicles to kickstart AUKUS pillar two
Michael Koziol - May 20, 2026
Washington: Australia, the United States and Britain are preparing to announce a significant collaboration on uncrewed underwater vehicles as part of AUKUS, a move that proponents hope will tamp down industry disquiet about the slow progress of the pact’s second pillar.
The marquee project will be announced at the Shangri-La Dialogue, an annual security conference, at the end of this month, according to multiple sources familiar with the plans who were not authorised to speak publicly.
Three of the people said the project related to unmanned underwater vehicles (UUVs), which have recently been the focus of joint testing and maritime exercises by the three countries off Australia’s east coast.
One person familiar with the plans said the project would involve sharing critical payloads for a range of UUVs, such as submarine-detecting sensors, equipment or weapons. Such technologies would typically be classified.
Defence Minister Richard Marles is expected to meet his US and UK counterparts at next week’s Shangri-La Dialogue in Singapore.
At an AUKUS roundtable at the Centre for Strategic and International Studies in Washington on Tuesday, held under the Chatham House Rule, a person confirmed a significant statement on pillar two was expected at that meeting.
Now that the Pentagon’s review of AUKUS had been completed, “we are getting back to normal, we are getting back to business on delivering”, the person said.
The imminent announcement was also discussed at a recent AUKUS industry conference in Washington hosted by Pyne and Partners, the defence lobbying outfit founded by former defence minister Christopher Pyne.
“On the AUKUS pillar two signature project announcement – because it’s pre-decision, I can’t go into a huge amount [of detail] on that, but there’s already been more than one project discussed,” one person told the summit, also held under the Chatham House Rule.
“The idea is for it to be a drumbeat [for more projects]. The idea is that there will be both things that are relatively low-cost and high-production, in terms of scale, and other things that are going to be very high-cost but lower-batch quantities of items.”
The Pentagon declined to comment.
A spokesperson for Marles confirmed he would attend the dialogue in Singapore, “where he will have the opportunity to meet with counterparts from across the region and the world”. They did not otherwise comment on the plans.
Marles noted at a Lowy Institute forum this week that Australia was a world leader in autonomous underwater systems.
Natural marquee project
Democratic US senator Tim Kaine, who sits on the US Senate’s armed services and foreign relations committees and is heavily involved in AUKUS in Congress, said UUVs would be a natural marquee project for pillar two.
“Underwater, uncrewed systems can be really helpful in the straits; they can be helpful in so many places, and there’s already significant expertise,” he said.
“As I think about marquee [projects], I think about something that has enormous capacity that we already have enough expertise that we can convert it into something useful and deployable promptly. As I think about that, I do think about underwater platforms.
“It doesn’t have to just be one thing. If you do one or two things, and you show success, then success begets success.”
The second pillar of AUKUS, which involves the three countries sharing and developing advanced capabilities, differs from pillar one, which is about the use, development and construction of nuclear-powered submarines.
An absence of marquee projects has plagued pillar two, with industry leaders regularly complaining about the lack of focus and strategic direction from the government.
Abraham Denmark, who, as senior adviser to former US defence secretary Lloyd Austin, was one of the key architects of AUKUS, said last week that the second pillar of the agreement had been widely neglected.
“It has been underperforming, pillar two,” Denmark told the Capitol Hill Pacific Defence Outlook Summit in Washington. “Despite the enthusiasm with which it was initially announced, it has not gotten the focus, resources, senior attention that it needs to be successful.”
Troy Duggan, the chief executive of Australian company C2 Robotics, which recently sold three of its Speartooth uncrewed underwater vehicles to the US, said the point of AUKUS pillar two was to gain efficiency and accelerate development of these technologies.
“The potential is that we would then work on different payloads and then share them,” he said. “I’m hoping it is heading in that direction.”
https://www.theage.com.au/world/north-america/marquee-project-on-underwater-vehicles-to-kickstart-aukus-pillar-two-20260510-p5zvee.html
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d0bc64 No.24628993
YouTube embed. Click thumbnail to play.
>>24611825
Inside the Australian mission to track Iranian missiles
Andrew Probyn - May 20, 2026
Deployment to the Middle East felt truly real for RAAF pilot “H” a few weeks back when he saw missiles shooting across the sky in front of his hi-tech surveillance plane.
“A little confronting,” he told this masthead. “Definitely a sight that I never really thought I would see.”
We are sitting in the cockpit of his E-7A Wedgetail, parked on the apron of an airstrip at a secret location in the Middle East.
“Out the window, up the front here, as we were flying some of those missions, we were seeing some of those ballistic missiles coming out of Iran.
“They are quite bright, and they go very high in the sky – very surreal seeing that from the air.”
About 80 Defence personnel have been based here since early March, conducting more than 40 missions to detect Iranian drones and missiles to help protect the United Arab Emirates.
Squadron Leader “H”, as we have been asked to call him, is the commander of the task unit.
He always wanted to be a pilot and he has the quiet confidence of a man who must have sensed he’d always get to live his dream.
Perhaps that’s what gives him maturity beyond his years. With a fetching charm and an Errol Flynn moustache, H has a family back home — a wife and two kids — but for the past 10 weeks or so, his family has been a crew of young professionals who are having the adventure of their lives.
Two-thirds are on their first deployment and most are in their 20s and 30s.
They have job titles that reflect the lingo of clinical modern warfare: air battle managers, mission aircrew, force protection and air surveillance operators. Others simply call themselves IT experts or electricians, but one nuggety fellow describes himself as an expert in survival, should there be an emergency on the ground or in the air.
The E-7A Wedgetail is at the heart of this deployment. A mission can be as long as 12 hours, with air-to-air refuelling.
But the surveillance secret of the plane is the ludicrously shaped dorsal fin on top of the modified Boeing 737.
Its technical name is a Multi-role Electronically Scanned Array, or MESA, but it looks like a giant surfboard connected to the fuselage by a near full-length fin.
The genius radar embedded in the surfboard and broadside fin can see 360 degrees both out and down, allowing air and surface threats to be quickly observed by the 10 specialists monitoring the signal on 10 consoles inside the plane.
As one of them puts it, the Wedgetail “doesn’t get wet feet”; its missions in the Middle East are largely confined to those above land on the southern side of the Arabian Gulf.
That’s the operational strength of the E-7A Wedgetail: the aircraft doesn’t have to venture across the water or over the Strait of Hormuz to see hundreds of kilometres into Iran.
“The radar’s incredibly powerful, so it gives us really good coverage across the Arabian Gulf,” Flight Lieutenant “C” says.
Defence Minister Richard Marles, who visited ADF personnel at their secret Middle East base, says the Wedgetail will be Australia’s key commitment to a future multi-nation mission to keep the Strait of Hormuz open, but says that other assets may be promised.
“We have said that we will commit the E-7 and we will also work with France and the UK who are leading that, as to what other contributions we can make,” Marles says.
“We are a maritime nation where an increasing part of our national prosperity is derived from seaborne trade – this waterway really matters to Australia, it matters to the world.”
Australia’s Ambassador to the United Arab Emirates Ridwaan Jadwat says he has been very impressed by the UAE’s resilience in the face of unprovoked attacks.
“Almost 3000 drones and missiles have been fired at the UAE, and about 95 per cent of them were intercepted, so the UAE armed forces did an incredible job in defending the country.”
He said restoring stability to the region is in everyone’s interest.
“You ignore the Middle East at your peril,” he said. “The fuel crisis around the world has shown why the Middle East remains so important to average Australians.”
https://www.theage.com.au/national/inside-the-australian-mission-to-track-iranian-missiles-20260520-p5zz6p.html
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IvqsW3uYpxI
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d0bc64 No.24628997
>>24548222 (pb)
Trump’s man for Canberra to be grilled on AUKUS, Australia ties
Jessica Gardner - May 20, 2026
1/2
Washington | The Trump administration appears to have fast-tracked the path to Senate scrutiny for its unlikely diplomatic pick for Canberra, Tea Party trailblazer David Brat, earning praise from Washington observers for prioritising the relationship with Australia.
The two-term former Republican congressman will give Senate testimony in Washington on Wednesday (Thursday AEST), where he is expected to be grilled on his support for the AUKUS submarine and technology pact and his foreign policy knowledge, three weeks after the surprise announcement that he was Donald Trump’s nominee for US ambassador to Australia.
Brat, best known for knocking off then-House majority leader Eric Cantor in 2014 to become the Republican candidate for a Virginia district he went on to win, “has good political ties with the president”, said Abe Denmark, a partner at geopolitical consulting firm The Asia Group.
Denmark said Brat’s Senate confirmation process was “moving quite quickly, which suggests getting him confirmed and to Canberra is a priority”.
His appearance comes as Australia’s incoming ambassador, Greg Moriarty, lands in Washington to begin his tenure. The former Defence Department secretary is expected to present diplomatic credentials to the White House this week for the customary ceremony.
Moriarty takes over from former prime minister Kevin Rudd, who had a rocky relationship with Trump and some of his close aides, but received accolades for the heavy lifting he did to maintain positive ties during a challenging period for the Australia-US relationship.
Brat’s late-April nomination to be the US ambassador to Australia came 15 months after Trump’s inauguration. The role had been vacant since December 2024, when Caroline Kennedy, the daughter of slain Democrat president John F. Kennedy, stepped down.
Although Trump still has about 100 ambassador spots to fill, meaning Australia’s vacancy was not a total anomaly, some observers had raised concerns that the vacancy sent a worrying signal about the strength of the alliance.
Partnership tested
Despite the decades-long close military and economic ties, the partnership has been tested by Trump’s tariffs, along with his demands on defence spending and presidential rebukes over Australia sitting out the war in Iran.
“Given it took some time for an ambassador to be nominated, it is good news that his confirmation is now getting under way,” said Arthur Sinodinos, the former Liberal senator who was Australia’s ambassador to the US between 2020 and 2023.
“While the relationship is in relatively good shape, it’s always good to have the ambassador on the ground in Canberra, as we do in Washington, to steward the relationship.”
White House spokeswoman Olivia Wales said Brat was the right choice, given he was “a champion for President Trump’s America-First policies”.
“The United States looks forward to strengthening our long-standing partnership with Australia through economic investments, defence cooperation, critical minerals, and more,” Wales said.
Brat did not respond to requests for comment.
(continued)
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d0bc64 No.24629001
>>24628997
2/2
In the US, all ambassadorial nominees must appear at a Senate Foreign Relations Subcommittee hearing before their appointment is taken to the floor for a vote. But during Trump’s second term, the process has been a prolonged one for many of the political allies, campaign donors and business associates the president has picked for overseas postings.
It has taken an average of 142 days – almost five months – between nomination and Senate confirmation for the 64 ambassadors locked in during Trump’s second term, according to analysis by The Australian Financial Review based on tracking by the American Foreign Service Association.
It took almost nine months for the ambassadors to Spain, South Africa and Latvia to be confirmed, and there are nine nominees still waiting who were announced before Brat came onto the scene 23 days ago.
Swift Senate approval
Three other ambassadorial nominees will give testimony on Wednesday.
Greg Brown, executive director of The Alliance Futures Initiative, said this suggested a level of confidence that they would gain swift Senate approval together.
Brown said while Kennedy was an iconic appointment, Brat was “a phone call to the president”.
“This is someone who knows how to speak MAGA,” Brown said. “He has the president’s ear in a useful way. As a diplomat, that’s who Australia wants.”
Before politics, Brat was an economics professor. He is now an executive at Liberty University, a conservative Christian school, a role requiring “extensive international travel” and cultivating of relationships, according to paperwork lodged in favour of his appointment with the State Department.
One Washington insider, speaking anonymously to preserve relationships, said he had heard Brat had never visited Australia. But others said in-country experience has not always been common for nominees, especially in the Trump era.
Dennis Jett, a former ambassador to Peru and Mozambique, said the quality of the diplomatic corps had deteriorated under Trump.
“In a normal presidency, it’s 30 per cent political and 70 per cent career people,” said Jett, a professor emeritus at Pennsylvania State University.
“In the Trump second term, it’s now 92 per cent political appointees … and 100 embassies around the world with no US ambassador.
“I guess in a way one should feel important as a country that Trump has even bothered to name an ambassador,” he said.
https://www.afr.com/world/north-america/trump-s-man-for-canberra-to-be-grilled-on-aukus-australia-ties-20260520-p5zyx6
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d0bc64 No.24629014
YouTube embed. Click thumbnail to play.
>>24628997
Incoming US ambassador urged to tackle anti-Semitism, counter China and advance AUKUS
JOE KELLY - 21 May 2026
1/2
The man Donald Trump hand-picked to serve as America’s ambassador in Canberra, David Brat, has been urged to help Australia tackle rising anti-Semitism, counter malign Chinese influence in the Indo-Pacific and advance the AUKUS partnership.
Dr Brat said he loved “everything” about Australia – including its people – and made clear he would closely follow the government of Anthony Albanese once he took up his post in the nation’s capital.
He stressed that few countries were more important to US interests than Australia and expected the alliance relationship to deepen over time, arguing that Mr Trump and Mr Albanese had used their White House meeting in October to “take the alliance to new heights.”
“They’ve been our best partner for 100 years,” he said.
Dr Brat pointed to Australia’s role in the Five-Eyes intelligence sharing arrangement, the Quadrilateral security dialogue and the AUKUS security partnership as evidence of its ongoing importance to Washington.
Speaking at his nomination hearing before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee on Wednesday, Dr Brat – a former US congressman and conservative free market economist – said that Australian expertise on critical minerals and rare earths would also be helpful for Washington because these materials affected “every aspect of the economy.”
On AUKUS, Dr Brat described the trilateral partnership between the US, the UK and Australia as “huge.”
He stressed that it was “not just a submarine deal.”
“It is a model for multilateral co-ordination with the US as we pivot to the Pacific,” he said.
“But that AUKUS framework is much more than just industrial economics … It’s security for the South Pacific.”
His comments echoed those of Democrat senator, Tim Kaine, who told The Australian earlier this week that the Australian government would find benefits in more forcefully promoting AUKUS as a strategic imperative to deter a more aggressive Beijing rather than framing it as a “workforce development initiative.”
Senator Kaine told the hearing there was a “huge opportunity” for American businesses to work on critical minerals in Australia and also within the AUKUS space.
Dr Brat responded by saying that he would “go all in on the business side.”
“I have a very positive feeling about the Australian people,” he said.
Referencing the Pentagon review of the AUKUS security partnership undertaken by Undersecretary of War for Policy, Elbridge Colby, Dr Brat said that “with respect to Bridge and all that, the President said full steam ahead.”
“It’s full steam ahead, and I’m full steam ahead.”
Chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, James Risch, said Dr Brat would be charged with overseeing an “historic transformation of our alliance with Australia” as the US moved to step-up “diplomatic, economic and security co-operation through AUKUS and other initiatives.”
Mr Risch said Australia was crucial in helping the US counter Beijing in the Indo-Pacific and hoped Dr Brat would push the Albanese government to “fully implement their new investment screening and foreign influence laws to counter malign Chinese influence.”
He also urged Dr Brat to assist Australia as it sought to “counter the rise of anti-Semitism that we’ve seen in Australia and for that matter around the world.”
Democratic ranking member Jeanne Shaheen urged Dr Brat to encourage the advancement of AUKUS – the security agreement under which Australia will acquire a fleet of nuclear-powered submarines, including the purchase of at least three Virginia-class submarines from America.
She noted Australia’s significance as a source of critical minerals and expressed concern at the Pentagon’s “prolonged” review of AUKUS in 2025 which she said had “created uncertainty” at a critical time in the region.
(continued)
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d0bc64 No.24629015
>>24629014
2/2
Speaking before the committee, Dr Brat said the US President along with US Secretary of State Marco Rubio had called upon diplomats to be “champions for the American people above all else.”
“If confirmed as ambassador, I will ensure American interests and American citizens always come first,” he said. “I also want to say a personal hello to Australia on this big day.”
“I love everything about your country. I am a tennis fanatic and follow your pros, the Open, and of course, the game of PM Albanese,” he said.
Dr Brat said he was “looking forward to sports diplomacy across the board. I love the Australian people I have met in life and appreciate their decency, wit, and sense of humour above all.”
Quoting from Aristotle, Dr Brat said that “true friends must pursue similar ends and goals, and we do. We share the same values of life, liberty and happiness.”
He noted that America lost 160,000 people in the Pacific during World War Two to gain a maritime foothold and ensure free navigation for future generations.
“Australia has been with us every step of the way with loyal friendship and courage,” he said. “If confirmed, I am very excited to build great friendships with you in person.”
“Few countries are as integral to US interests as Australia, as evidenced by the broad bipartisan support for the alliance,” he said. “A longstanding treaty ally, Five-Eyes partner, AUKUS, and Quad member, our partnership with Australia makes America ‘safer, stronger, and more prosperous’,” Dr Brat said.
“Our relationship with Australia under this administration is deepening. During the President’s meeting last October with Prime Minister Albanese, our leaders charted a course to take the Alliance to new heights.”
Dr Brat was one of the early supporters of the US President’s political career and is set to replace former ambassador Caroline Kennedy, who left Canberra after Mr Trump’s November 2024 election victory.
Speaking in April, Mr Albanese said that he would work constructively with “whoever is determined to be the ambassador”.
Dr Brat, 61, shot to prominence more than a decade ago when he won an upset victory in the Republican primary for the 7th congressional district in Virginia against the then House majority leader Eric Cantor after taking a hard line on border protection and “crony capitalism”.
That race was widely seen as David v Goliath contest leading into the 2014 midterms, with Mr Cantor massively outspending the Tea Party-backed Dr Brat.
The comfortable victory enjoyed by Dr Brat in the primary – besting Mr Cantor by a margin of about 56 per cent to 44 per cent – is widely seen as one of the precursors to the success enjoyed by Mr Trump when he ran for the presidency in 2016.
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/world/incoming-us-ambassador-urged-to-tackle-antisemitism-counter-china-and-advance-aukus/news-story/80632e0e507fc2927aa535d11d1eeaac
https://www.9news.com.au/world/donald-trump-update-us-presidents-pick-for-ambassador-to-australia-david-brat-faces-senate-committee-nomination-hearing/6d597d09-2fce-417a-855c-f8d1439f87cb
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lF23rB5UiTk
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d0bc64 No.24629021
>>24621731
Former SAS commander defends soldiers giving evidence in Ben Roberts-Smith trial
STEPHEN RICE - May 19, 2026
A former SAS commander who served in Afghanistan has come forward in defence of soldiers prepared to give evidence in the upcoming war crimes trial of Ben Roberts-Smith, arguing that pursuing the case is not a betrayal of the Anzac spirit but a defence of it.
Peter Winnall, who commanded 1 SAS Squadron in 2010 and saw frequent combat in Afghanistan, says accountability for alleged crimes must also extend to the top ranks of the military.
“Australians instinctively understand when accountability is uneven,” Mr Winnall writes in The Australian. “That instinct has been turned into a false choice: stand with the soldiers, or stand with the process. In reality, a professional military requires both.
“The fix is to follow accountability from the bottom all the way to the top, so that no one, whatever their rank or their medals, carries the weight of this alone.”
Mr Winnall, who earned the Distinguished Service Medal and Bar – one of Australia’s highest military decorations for command in combat – is the founder of consulting group Rekon.
He was never deployed overseas with Mr Roberts-Smith but did a sniper course with him and “got to know him relatively well then … but Ben was just another SAS soldier at that point.”
Mr Winnall also knows Andrew Hastie, now a leading figure in the Liberal Party but previously an SAS captain who gave evidence against Mr Roberts-Smith in the Victoria Cross recipient’s defamation case against the Nine newspapers.
Mr Winnall was one of Mr Hastie’s squadron commanders when he was doing the SAS reinforcement cycle, the 18-month course that follows SAS selection.
“I effectively helped mentor him through some of the courses and I’ve kept in contact with him. I think it’s fair to say that I’m a friend of Andrew’s, and I speak to him frequently.
“But equally, I also have relationships with other people on the other side, too.”
Mr Winnall says he is speaking out now because Australians are being pushed into two opposing camps: “You’re either a BRS person or a Hastie person … but when you break it down, there’s a third option.”
Mr Roberts-Smith is entitled to the presumption of innocence and the process must be allowed to run, fairly and to its end, Mr Winnall says.
“The jury will decide who’s innocent and who’s guilty, but both parties deserve to do so in a way where there’s no vitriol or social media attacks on people calling them traitors or grubs.”
The case has hijacked other SAS stories, he says, and the heroism of the soldiers he served with. “The current debate has been collapsed into a false binary. You either support the SAS, or you don’t. That framing is wrong, and it is corroding the country’s ability to think clearly about its own soldiers.”
Mr Winnall acknowledges the process to date has been “terrible”. “Soldiers and families have been put through hell by delay and leak. All of this is fair criticism. None of it is an argument for abandoning the principle. Otherwise, the message to the next generation is simple: the law applies to you only when it is convenient for the country to enforce it.”
He also acknowledges that accountability has been “uneven”.
“That’s probably been the hardest for the Australian public, and particularly Australian soldiers, they can smell bs a mile away. And you can’t say that only the soldiers were accountable when there’s a whole chain of commanders receiving medals.
“You can’t get a medal for leadership in action and then … say no, I didn’t know what was happening under my watch.”
The ADF has avoided acting on command responsibility for too long, he says. The courts must deal with alleged crimes but there must be a separate process for command, culture and oversight.
Pursuing these issues tells the next generation of Australian soldiers “that there is honour in the way we fight, not only in the fact that we fight”, he says.
“The people who reported what they believed to be war crimes are not jealous, or malicious, or weak. Like anyone who passes selection, they are tough professional soldiers. They deserve the right to raise their concerns without fear of reprisal, in the same way anyone accused deserves the chance to answer those allegations in court.”
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation/former-sas-commander-defends-soldiers-giving-evidence-in-ben-robertssmith-trial/news-story/3cec99ffea5b57fee5970d5963e48a71
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d0bc64 No.24629043
>>24621731
>>24629021
COMMENTARY: Individual criminal trials where evidence warrants it isn’t an attack on the SAS. It is how serious institutions preserve their integrity
PETER WINNALL - May 19, 2026
1/2
I served in the Special Air Service Regiment as a troop commander, squadron commander and operations officer. I was in combat in Afghanistan many times. I commanded 1 SAS Squadron in 2010. I served in the same theatre, in the same period, under the same rules as the people now in the headlines. I knew them. I knew the culture. I am watching a public debate about the regiment that is, in important ways, wrong.
Ben Roberts-Smith has been charged with war crimes. He has always maintained his innocence. He is entitled to the presumption of innocence. He is entitled to a fair trial. He is entitled to defend the charges through every avenue the law allows. The country owes him that. So does everyone who served alongside him. Whatever the outcome, the answer is the same: let the process run, fairly and to its end. That is what the rule of law looks like. It is also what he, and everyone who served alongside him, is owed.
But this case has hijacked other stories of the SAS, and those stories are worth telling properly. On the day Trooper Jason Brown was killed during the 1 SAS Squadron deployment to Afghanistan, a soldier I will call Sergeant D ran 30m across open ground under intense enemy fire to try to reach him. Jason was within metres of an enemy machine gun position. Sergeant D knew he would be hit on the way, hit when he got there, and hit dragging Jason back. He was. His equipment had no fewer than seven holes in it. The only reason they could not count more is because the material was shredded. On that same rotation, another soldier confided that during a separate gunfight he held fire on a Taliban fighter when he realised the man on the other side was a child, clearly terrified, who had been handed a weapon. He accepted the risk to himself rather than shoot the boy. These are the soldiers I served with. Fierce in the fight. Professional and humane after it. They are the majority. They are the unit.
The current debate has been collapsed into a false binary. You either support the SAS or you don’t. That framing is wrong, and it is corroding the country’s ability to think clearly about its own soldiers. The debate needs to be separated into three issues, because almost no one disagrees once they are.
The first is principle. Do the Laws of Armed Conflict apply to Australian soldiers? Almost no one says no. Where there are allegations, they must be investigated, tried in the proper forum, and the accused must receive a fair trial, including the chance to clear their name. Australia has signed up to this. To argue otherwise is to argue Australia should leave the company of nations it has spent a century helping to shape.
The second is process. The process to date has not been handled well. Evidence has apparently been compromised. Mistakes have been made. Soldiers and families have been put through hell by delay and leak. This is fair criticism. None of it is an argument for abandoning the principle. You learn the lessons, fix the process, and continue. Otherwise, the message to the next generation is simple: the law applies to you only when it is convenient for the country to enforce it.
The third is accountability, and this is where the debate has gone furthest astray. Accountability has been uneven. At one end, individuals face investigation and trial. At the other, institutions have absorbed reputational damage. The layer between them remains largely unaccountable. Operations were planned. Tempo was set. Tactics were endorsed. Citations were written. These were not patrol-level decisions alone. If accountability is to have legitimacy, it cannot sit only at the bottom. Extending it upward is not an attack on the institution. It is a requirement of it.
Command responsibility exists for a reason. The ADF has avoided acting on it for too long. This does not replace individual criminal trials. It complements them. Courts for alleged unlawful acts. A separate process for command, culture and oversight. The actions taken after the Brereton Report did not go far enough. Australians instinctively understand when accountability is uneven. That instinct has been turned into a false choice: stand with the soldiers or stand with the process.
In reality, a professional military requires both. The fix is to follow accountability from the bottom all the way to the top, so no one, whatever their rank or their medals, carries the weight of this alone.
(continued)
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d0bc64 No.24629046
>>24629043
2/2
Pursuing these matters properly is not a betrayal of the Anzac spirit. It is a defence of it. It tells the next generation of Australian soldiers there is honour in the way we fight, not only in the fact that we fight. It is what stops young men and women being asked to do things in Australia’s name that will haunt them for the rest of their lives.
The people who reported what they believed to be war crimes are not jealous or malicious or weak. Like anyone who passes selection, they are tough professional soldiers. They deserve the right to raise their concerns without fear of reprisal, in the same way anyone accused deserves the chance to answer those allegations in court. Both sides deserve that opportunity. Neither has been given it cleanly so far.
Australia benefits from a loyal public that holds its soldiers, and the SAS in particular, in high esteem. That respect is well-earned. It is also conditional. It rests on the expectation the military acts with honour and within the laws Australia has chosen to adopt.
The Anzac tradition is not abstract. It is grounded in conduct. The SAS is full of extraordinary people who have done extraordinary things for Australia. The allegations against a small number must be tested in the proper forum, with the rights of the accused respected at every step.
Saying so is not an attack on the unit. It is the only way to keep it worthy of the name.
Unfortunately the public debate on this has degraded into personal attacks and tribalism. Anything that can be used to discredit an individual gets used as ammunition. Old stories. Petty grievances. Name calling. Both the accused and the witnesses are subjected to this. Different attacks, same dynamic.
People who have raised serious concerns deserve to raise them without becoming targets themselves. Neither group is getting that. And the attacks are typically not coming from those who served.
They are coming from people who were never in the fight, attacking people who were. Some of them with reach in the media.
We need leadership on this. We need senior figures, in uniform and out of it, to stand publicly for the rule of law. Let the process run without the tribalism, without the name calling. That is the only road to a result anyone can trust.
Australia now faces a simple choice. Either these matters are tested properly through lawful process, or they remain unresolved indefinitely, hanging over the regiment, the veterans involved, and the country itself. The credible path forward is individual criminal trials where the evidence warrants it, institutional reform so the failures of the past are not repeated, and command-level accountability that reaches beyond the patrol level.
That is not an attack on the SAS. It is how serious institutions preserve their integrity. You can stand with the Regiment and stand with the rule of law. They are the same thing. That is why I want these cases tried in court. And it is why you should too.
Peter Winnall, DSM and Bar, was an SAS troop commander, squadron commander and operations officer. He commanded 1 SAS Squadron in Afghanistan in 2010. He now runs a strategy consultancy in Perth.
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/commentary/individual-criminal-trials-where-evidence-warrants-it-isnt-an-attack-on-the-sas-it-is-how-serious-institutions-preserve-their-integrity/news-story/00bbe12169db8778e5c13852cec76e4a
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d0bc64 No.24629058
>>24621731
>>24629021
>>24629043
ANALYSIS: If the SAS committed war crimes, where were the officers?
AARON PATRICK: No Government official, military veteran or investigative journalist has been able to explain where the commanders were when prisoners were allegedly executed in Afghanistan.
Aaron Patrick - 19 MAY 2026
1/2
Despite the hundreds of millions spent investigating allegations of war crimes in Afghanistan, no government official, military veteran or investigative journalist has ever been able to publicly explain one of the great mysteries of the saga: where were the officers when prisoners and civilians were allegedly executed?
The investigation by former NSW judge Paul Brereton cleared army commanders of blame, arguing corporals and sergeants were responsible. Even though 39 Afghans were unlawfully killed, according to Justice Brereton, including when there were dozens of Australian soldiers in the vicinity, the only men charged with the war crime of murder are an ex-private, Oliver Schulz, and the famous former corporal Ben Roberts-Smith.
Into this fraught debate on Tuesday entered a former SAS officer who had previously operated mostly in the shadows.
Peter Winnall, a former major in the elite regiment, is regarded by special forces veterans as a member of the group responsible for publicising misconduct allegations that have come to dominate Australia’s memory of the war.
After being contacted on Monday by The Nightly over a social media comment critical of Mr Roberts-Smith, the business consultant published a 1300-word article in The Australian arguing for the civilian prosecution of the Victoria Cross awardee.
While that was not surprising, Mr Winnall raised the question of culpability by his own class, the officers. He seemed to argue, obliquely, that soldiers above the level of leaders and deputy leaders of five or six-man teams (roles held by Mr Roberts-Smith) could have been expected to know if dozens of Afghans were being murdered by their men.
“Accountability has been uneven,” he wrote. “At one end, individuals face investigation and trial. At the other, institutions have absorbed reputational damage. The layer between them remains largely unaccountable. Operations were planned. Tempo was set. Tactics were endorsed. Citations were written.
“These were not patrol-level decisions alone. If accountability is to have legitimacy, it cannot sit only at the bottom. Extending it upward is not an attack on the institution. It is a requirement of it.”
The official theory that junior SAS soldiers went rogue was endorsed in 2020 by then-Chief of the Defence Force Angus Campbell, who placed more emphasis on culture — which leaders set — than criminal intent, which is what prosecutors will have to prove.
“But warrior culture Justice Brereton is, I think, speaking to a slow deviation from normal and good culture in a military environment where, instead of seeking to serve others, you seek to serve yourself and to do so in a manner that creates power and authority and prestige,” he said in 2020.
Aggressive and competitive
General Campbell, a former SAS officer, commanded all Australian forces in the Middle East in 2011 and 2012, when Federal prosecutors allege prisoners were executed.
The commander of all special forces at the time was Maj-Gen. Peter Gilmore, also known as Gus, now the deputy head of a civilian intelligence service.
The Brereton inquiry was not commissioned until 2016, when Maj-Gen. Gilmore had returned to the regular army. He declined to be interviewed.
Other veterans say the SAS’s geographic isolation at its Perth headquarters, an unusually high number of non-commissioned officers, wide-ranging mission and limited job swaps with other units created an aggressive and competitive culture that should have been identified and shaped by commanders.
Neil James, the executive director of the Australian Defence Association, referred to “the apparent noble-cause corruption problem” which he wrote on May 3 was why “commanding officers of the SASR have had to regularly address the ‘Sergeant’s Mess problem’ when tackling discipline, professionalism and culture-change problems in the unit.”
(continued)
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d0bc64 No.24629062
>>24629058
2/2
The SAS normally operates in small teams, known as patrols, led by a sergeant or corporal. About four teams make up a platoon, known as a troop, which is led by a captain. Three troops form a squadron, which is led by a major. The SAS has four squadrons.
Mr Winnall joined the regiment as a troop commander and took over the 1st Squadron in time to arrive in Afghanistan a couple of weeks after 2nd Squadron won the 2010 Battle of Tizak, for which Mr Roberts-Smith was recognised with the Victoria Cross.
The battle was the high point of the war for the SAS, although Mr Roberts-Smith’s medal triggered internal jealousy that contributed to the allegations against him being made public. He has denied ever killing a prisoner, or ordering anyone else to do so, and has said he intends to plead not guilty.
Promoted through his army career, Mr Winnall runs a small Perth-based management consulting firm, Rekon Group. “People who know me know I am quite demanding and I don’t suffer fools,” he said on a corporate video several years ago.
“It’s rare that people I work with are able to exceed my expectations.”
Chain of command
One of Mr Roberts-Smith’s leading public supporters, Hugh Poate, supported Mr Winnall’s decision to raise officers’ potential culpability for breaches of military law.
“Accountability should be a top-down approach,” Mr Poate said today. “That’s why you have a chain of command in the first place.”
Mr Poate’s 23-year-old son, Robert, was killed with two other Australians in 2012 by an Afghan government soldier named Hekmatullah. Mr Roberts-Smith and his team were hunting the killer when he allegedly kicked Afghan Ali Jan off a river embankment in the village of Darwan and ordered him shot.
Mr Poate accused Australian governments of spending more money and resources to investigate and prosecute Mr Roberts-Smith and Mr Schulz than on seeking to have Hekmatullah’s death sentence carried out by the previous Afghan government. Hekmatullah is regarded as a hero by the Taliban regime.
“Successive governments in this country have failed to have anything to do with trying to ensure that Hekmatullah’s sentence imposed by a court of law is carried out,” he said today. “They have discouraged it.”
The Office of the Special Investigator, which prosecutes veterans over alleged war crimes, was allocated another $50 million in last week’s Budget.
The agency said it has spent $234.5 million since established in 2021, although Budget papers state it has been allocated more than $300m. The agency declined to explain the difference.
On the weekend Mr Winnall joked about the Darwan allegations. Responding to a satirical Instagram article proposing a paintball fight between Mr Roberts-Smith and one of his accusers, federal Liberal MP Andrew Hastie, he wrote: “I’d go watch except innocent bystanders likely to get kicked off a cliff!”
The names and photographs of his staff were removed from the firm’s website on Tuesday after the comment was reported by The Nightly. The comment was deleted.
https://thenightly.com.au/australia/if-the-sas-committed-war-crimes-where-were-the-officers-c-22304377
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d0bc64 No.24629076
>>24566300 (pb)
>>24617170
>>24617170
Australia, New Zealand and Pacific join forces to dismantle drug networks
AMANDA HODGE - May 19, 2026
1/2
Australian, New Zealand and Pacific Island nations have agreed to co-ordinate maritime surveillance and interception of transnational drug shipments, share intelligence on money laundering, and harmonise legislation to fight organised crime syndicates now flooding the region with drugs.
Regional police ministers will also meet annually to ensure those co-ordinated efforts are keeping up with transnational criminal networks that are constantly adapting, and using increasingly sophisticated technology, to evade law enforcement.
“Organised crime keeps adapting. Organised crime will try to break every single system we put forward,” Home Affairs Minister Tony Burke said on the sidelines of Tuesday’s inaugural ministerial meeting in Nadi, Fiji.
“If organised crime is going to function on a transnational basis, then our response needs to be transnational as well.”
While Pacific Island nations already had a number of policing centres focused on fighting transnational crime, from drug trafficking to cybercrime, there had not been sufficient co-ordination to effectively fight the international syndicates, he added.
“That goes to exactly why this meeting was called and why (regional) police chiefs and commissioners wanted to make sure police ministers were leading. Because to be able to get that extra layer of co-ordination, you need extra engagement at the political level,” he said.
Mr Burke acknowledged intelligence sharing was complicated by the “insider threat” from widespread corruption within Pacific Island institutions, but insisted “if we were to say, ‘if not every system is perfect we may as well give up’, then organised crime would win”.
Australia has been working closely with Colombian authorities since 2000 to try to stop drug shipments before they left their source country.
But it needed to do more work in the Pacific “because it is not simply a transit location for these drugs”, Mr Burke said.
“It has also become a cruel destination in its own right. We need to stand together and go through every one of those levers to work as one,” he said. “Australia needs to do more and is doing more.”
The decision follows the Australian Federal Police on Monday announcing a new International Joint Investigations Team in Colombia focused on sharpening intelligence and interception of cartel drug shipments at their source.
(continued)
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d0bc64 No.24629080
>>24629076
2/2
AFP Commissioner Krissy Barrett told The Australian on Tuesday the taskforce, involving Australian, NZ, Colombian, Mexican and US law enforcement, would feed intelligence to transnational crime policing centres across the Pacific to provide “end-to-end visibility”.
“That’s been the shift over the last 12 months. We now have a clear threat picture across all of the Pacific (police) chiefs in terms of what we’re facing together,” Ms Barrett said.
“We’re very aware of the demand issues we have in Australia and NZ, we’re very well aware of the issues they’re causing in the Pacific, and the next logical step is upstream to where the source countries are.”
Ms Barrett said the Colombian-based taskforce would “supercharge” existing AFP police work with local authorities, and would be “very operational in terms of how we work on the ground together”.
Australia has also proposed Fiji host a regional maritime co-ordination centre that could manage all intelligence and information flows and co-ordinate sovereign maritime interdictions potentially involving Guardian-class patrol boats under the existing Pacific Maritime Security Program.
As the main transit and staging hub for a tidal wave of methamphetamine and cocaine sent by crime syndicates from Colombia to Hong Kong, Southeast and Central Asia along the so-called Pacific narco-corridor, Fiji is now facing a national drug emergency and the fastest-growing rate of HIV infection in the world.
Fiji Police Commissioner Rusiate Tudravu conceded in an exclusive interview with The Australian that local authorities were in a race against time to address the spiralling drug problem, even as Fiji wrestled with internal corruption within its force.
But, he added, his agency now had a “clear line of sight” of transnational drug trafficking networks operating from Latin America, through the Pacific and into Australia and NZ, including a list of names of criminals operating between the two countries.
“We are working closely on a list of names given to us so that we fully understand what is their involvement and can keep track of their movements in Fiji,” Mr Tudravu said.
“We are in a better position now to identify the local domestic facilitators and those that are in contact with our local facilitators from Australia and NZ, where those names are coming from.”
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation/australia-new-zealand-and-pacific-join-forces-to-dismantle-drug-networks/news-story/7914a9d198c0561f34f2a7743a480adf
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d0bc64 No.24629091
>>24566300 (pb)
>>24617170
>>24617189
>>24629076
‘Very, very scary’: How Latin American cartels team up with Chinese syndicates to target Australia
AMANDA HODGE - 20 May 2026
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Latin America’s biggest drug cartels are increasingly co-operating with Chinese and other Asian organised crime syndicates to traffic drugs through the Pacific to Australian shores, a global transnational crime expert says.
Virginia Comolli, Pacific Program head at the Global Initiative Against Transnational Crime, says growing collaboration between syndicates that once fought each other for territory has underscored a critical need for greater regional and international co-ordination, including intelligence sharing.
“It is a fascinating development and a very, very scary one. We are seeing groups who in the past would fight with each other over control of particular turf or drug market … now collaborating,” she said on the sidelines of the Australian Federal Police-sponsored Pacific Transnational Crime Police Summit in Fiji.
“For me, what’s very concerning is that some foreign actors we see embedded in the Pacific are engaged in legitimate businesses … they might also be used for political interference, which brings up a wider question around geopolitics and strategic influence.”
One of the most serious recent examples of that criminal cross pollination was the Mexican Sinaloa drug cartel’s attempt to traffic 4.1 tonnes of methamphetamine via Fiji to Australia.
The drug shipment was intercepted in January 2024 with the help of AFP and US intelligence, marking the biggest meth haul seized in the Pacific. “That investigation pointed to collaboration between Mexican actors, Sinaloa cartel, and Chinese drug syndicates,” Ms Comolli said.
“You see Mexicans take charge of the first segment of the supply chain from the Americas into Fiji, let’s say, and then they join forces with Chinese syndicates … who also have contacts with local facilitators, who would then deal with the movement of drugs on the ground and take charge of delivery onwards.
“That didn’t happen because the drugs were seized, but it’s a fascinating example – and we’re seeing more and more of this, of criminals from different parts of the world coming together.
“Ultimately they just want to make money and they realise by pooling their skills, expertise and knowledge they’re more likely to be successful, so they’ll do that.”
Ms Comolli did not name the Chinese group involved but said the Chinese 14K triad was “often mentioned in the Pacific”, a crime network with a deep footprint in online scam centres, money laundering and drug trafficking across Southeast Asia. Other Chinese and Southeast Asian organised criminal syndicates were also operating in the region, along with New Zealand and Australian crime gangs.
(continued)
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d0bc64 No.24629093
>>24629091
2/2
Fiji police commissioner Rusiate Tudravu told the summit on Wednesday that “transnational organised crime respects no borders and therefore it’s important for Pacific law enforcement to operate similarly”.
Addressing concerns over intelligence leaks via corrupt elements within law enforcement agencies, Mr Tudravu said “international threats linked to corruption is a reality of policing the world over, and one we can’t evade in the region, (but) our people deserve to do better and we want to do better”.
On Monday, AFP commissioner Krissy Barrett revealed a new International Joint Investigation Team based in Bogota, Colombia, part-funded by Australia and NZ, that would work with Latin American police agencies to try to intercept drug shipments before they left source countries.
The team would share real-time intelligence information with the Pacific Transnational Crime Co-ordination Centre, though no island nation police officers would be incorporated into the Colombia-based team.
This week’s Pacific policing summit aims to build closer co-operation between Australia, NZ, Pacific island nations and American and Latin American agencies.
When asked about the absence of Chinese law enforcement officials, Ms Comolli said it “highlighted how transnational crime unfolds against the backdrop of geopolitical competition”.
“We know many Pacific Island countries have bilateral relationships with China … and those countries will have their separate engagement.”
Nine people, including Fijian Australian businessman Jale Aukerea, received record prison sentences from 15 years to life for their roles in the 2024 Fijian meth shipment.
Yet Fijian police say they believe the main local “drug kingpin” behind the meth shipment was another Australian-Fijian, Sam Amine, who fled the country before he could be arrested and is now in custody in Sydney on a separate drug charge.
Mr Tudravu confirmed to The Australian that his officers were working towards an extradition request for Mr Amine to face charges in Fiji over his alleged role in the shipment.
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/world/very-very-scary-how-latin-american-cartels-team-up-with-chinese-syndicates-to-target-australia/news-story/c6c6c536420fb814a004cffa509ba9c5
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d0bc64 No.24629102
>>24616963
Legal action delays bombshell Dan-era IBAC report into Labor
DAMON JOHNSTON - 21 May 2026
Extraordinary legal action launched by a key witness in IBAC’s marathon investigation into dealings between the Andrews government and the United Firefighters Union has forced the anti-corruption agency to delay the release of its findings.
Victoria’s Independent Broad-based Anti-corruption Commission informed witnesses on Thursday morning that the last-ditch legal move by a witness would delay next week’s scheduled tabling of the report in parliament.
“Publication of IBAC’s special report on Operation Richmond has been delayed due to court proceedings commenced against IBAC,” the agency said.
“We remain committed to the release of the special report, which is ready for publication, pending the resolution of the proceedings.
“We acknowledge the impact this delay may have on witnesses and people involved in the investigation and continue to make IBAC’s independent, external support service available to witnesses. As the matter is before the court, we are unable to provide further information at this time.”
IBAC was planning to release the findings of its top-secret investigation – an investigation that has dragged on for longer than World War II – into dealings between Labor and Victoria’s firefighters union next Wednesday.
IBAC has not revealed who has launched the eleventh-hour legal move to block Operation Richmond being made public. But the UFU has previously court action against the agency which has contributed to the delays.
The Victorian Supreme Court has confirmed legal action relating to IBAC has been launched. “A matter involving IBAC has been filed with the Court. No further details will be released at this stage,” a court spokesperson said.
The release of the report threatens to trigger a fresh integrity crisis for Premier Jacinta Allan just six months before the state election. But the latest legal counterattack threatens to push the release of the bombshell report past the November 28 poll.
Operation Richmond has been running under tight secrecy since 2019 and while no public hearings were called, scores of witnesses – including then premier Daniel Andrews – were grilled in private by IBAC.
The investigation, sparked by a complaint from a Labor insider, has been digging into the 2016 pay-and-conditions negotiations between the Andrews government and the United Firefighters Union and its state secretary Peter Marshall.
The Australian has reported that in private examinations, IBAC grilled witnesses about the role played by Mr Andrews in the negotiations – which led to a favourable enterprise bargaining agreement with the UFU.
Mr Andrews and IBAC have repeatedly dodged questions about whether he was cross-examined during closed-door Operation Richmond hearings.
The Australian believes Mr Andrews, as premier, was grilled in a private hearing over events that handed the union generous allowances and effective operational control over the volunteer Country Fire Authority.
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation/legal-action-delays-bombshell-danera-ibac-report-into-labor/news-story/0d3ea555d46a1689588e8b39cc2c7414
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d0bc64 No.24629112
>>24447120 (pb)
>>24556743 (pb)
Elon Musk's X Corp ordered to pay $750,000 after admitting it contravened Australian child protection request
Andrew Thorpe - 21 May 2026
Australia's Federal Court has ordered Elon Musk's social media company X Corp to pay $750,000 after it admitted to failing to comply with an order to provide information about steps it has taken to stop child exploitation.
In an order published online this morning, Federal Court judge Michael Wheelahan said the company had 45 days to pay a $650,000 fine and $100,000 in legal costs to the government, bringing an end to a three-year court saga.
"The respondent admits that it contravened the act," said Christopher Tran, a lawyer for eSafety commissioner Julie Inman Grant, referring to Australia's Online Safety Act during the Federal Court hearing this morning.
"There was ongoing noncompliance for some 38 days."
The notice from the commissioner was first issued in early 2023, when Ms Inman Grant asked some of the world's largest technology companies to provide a report on what they were doing about child abuse material appearing on their platforms.
A reporting notice, issued under Australia's Online Safety Act, was sent to Twitter in February that year, and Twitter merged with X the following month.
Arguments presented to the court by X Corp against complying with the notice included that Twitter no longer existed as a legal entity and that X did not carry its predecessor's regulatory obligations in Australia.
Those arguments were rejected by the Federal Court in July of last year. However, X had refused to pay the $610,500 fine levied against it.
Justice Wheelahan's order raises that amount to $650,000, and adds the commissioner's legal costs.
Questioning big tech 'a key part of our work', commissioner says
In a statement issued after the judge's decision, Ms Inman Grant said it was critical that tech companies engaged in "meaningful transparency", rather than simply offering form responses to questions around child safety.
"This is not only a key part of our work as Australia's online safety regulator, it also provides the Australian public with important information about how these companies are tackling the worst-of-the-worst content on their platforms," she said.
Ms Inman Grant has repeatedly clashed with Mr Musk and his companies in her role as eSafety commissioner, over issues of censorship and transparency related to its internal processes to protect children.
Mr Musk has issued a slew of public criticisms of the commissioner in response, labelling her an "unelected bureaucrat" and the "eSafety Commissar", which Ms Inman Grant told the ABC had resulted in her receiving death threats and the doxxing of her children.
The commissioner dropped a separate case against X in 2024 aiming to force it to remove graphic footage of a Sydney church stabbing from its platform.
https://www.abc.net.au/news/2026-05-21/x-admits-noncompliance-with-australian-child-protection-request/106704850
https://www.comcourts.gov.au/file/FEDERAL/P/VID1092/2023/order_list
https://www.judgments.fedcourt.gov.au/judgments/Judgments/fca/single/2026/2026fca0629
https://www.comcourts.gov.au/file/Federal/P/VID1092/2023/3971416/event/32881705/document/2778938
https://qresear.ch/?q=Julie+Inman+Grant
https://qresear.ch/?q=Online+Safety+Act
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d0bc64 No.24629129
>>24611895
Notorious paedophile Peter Liddy to be released from jail - for now
Abe Maddison - May 20, 2026
A paedophile ex-magistrate will be released from prison when his sentence expires but he will immediately be placed on home detention while awaiting a court's decision on his future.
Peter Liddy, 83, is due for release on June 4 after serving his 25-year sentence for child sexual offences in South Australia between 1982 and 1986.
SA Attorney-General Kyam Maher has applied to the Supreme Court for Liddy to either be indefinitely detained, or the subject of an extended supervision order.
Liddy's lawyer Jeff Powell SC had applied for a stay on those applications, which Justice Rachael Gray refused on Wednesday, meaning the applications would proceed.
Instead, she said it was "appropriate for the protection and safety of the community" that Liddy be released on home detention and subject to an intensive supervision regime for an initial period of six months.
Gray imposed restrictions on Liddy's internet access and banned him from contacting children.
He must also wear an electronic transmitter, not consume alcohol or drugs, or possess a firearm.
To make a decision on the applications for indefinite detention or extended supervision, the court now requires reports from two medical experts on whether Liddy is unwilling or incapable of controlling his sexual instincts.
At a hearing earlier in May, Powell said that in 2019, the Crown sought a report from their "trusted and hand-picked expert", forensic psychiatrist Dr Craig Raeside, on whether a similar detention application should be filed.
On Wednesday, Gray said she had noted that both parties considered Raeside to be an appropriate person to conduct an assessment.
"The evidence before this court supports that view," she said.
The matter will return to court on November 18 for further argument on the applications.
A spokesperson for Maher said the government's priority was the safety and protection of the community "and we've taken every step available to us".
"We welcome the court's decision to dismiss Liddy's application to permanently stay proceedings," the spokesperson said.
"The court has ordered expert medical reports to address whether Liddy is willing and able to control his sexual instincts.
"These reports are essential in determining whether he will be detained indefinitely."
Liddy was jailed in 2001 for a minimum of 18 years for sexually abusing four boys while working as a coach at Brighton Surf Life Saving Club and for offering to bribe one of the victims.
His previous bids to be released on parole have been rejected.
Parole Board chair Frances Nelson has said the board "doesn't feel comfortable that he's still not a risk to the community".
"He victim blames, and has no empathy for his victims," she said.
https://www.9news.com.au/national/peter-liddy-notorious-paedophile-to-be-released-from-jail–for-now/b4d45cb3-5dbd-464d-b364-9d01a24ac2a2
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d0bc64 No.24629136
YouTube embed. Click thumbnail to play.
>>23158072 (pb)
>>24406727 (pb)
>>24603494
‘Disgraceful’: Israeli ambassador condemns minister over shocking flotilla video
Nick Newling and Bronte Gossling - May 21, 2026
Israel’s ambassador to Australia has condemned the actions of Israel’s National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir, who taunted detained flotilla activists, but brushed off the incident as “politics”.
Hillel Newman, who was subject to an official rebuke from officials at the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade over the incident on Thursday, joined Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and senior members of the country’s cabinet in condemning Ben-Gvir, but said an immediate penalty was impossible as the government had entered a pre-election “transitional” period.
Addressing journalists at Parliament House in Canberra, Newman, barely three months into his appointment, said of the incident: “It doesn’t happen in politics? Never happened in Australia that you’ve had a minister that does something which is not accepted by other ministers. There is politics.”
“There can be ministers in Australia, politicians in Australia, even part of a party that is ruling that can do things that are disgraceful. The question is, how you respond and whether you condemn it. In this case, Ben-Gvir was condemned by the leadership of the state of Israel.”
A series of social media videos published by Ben-Gvir show the minister taunting groups of activists who had been detained while sailing towards Gaza on board the Global Sumud Flotilla. Detainees were zip-tied and forced to kneel on the ground. Australian flotilla spokespeople have confirmed no Australians were depicted, but have yet to confirm the health of the 11 citizens currently held by Israel.
Newman said all Australians were well and would be swiftly processed.
The videos have received widespread international condemnation. Netanyahu, echoed by Newman, said the actions were “not in line with Israel’s values and norms”, but the flotilla’s mission amounted to unnecessary provocation.
Newman said Ben-Gvir was directly responsible for police forces who may have participated in the activity, and that an investigation into the incident was likely.
“I don’t know how it folded out, how he managed to get them into that position, but once it was known to the government of Israel, it was condemned by the government of Israel entirely,” Newman said.
“It’s not acceptable, it’s disgraceful … I say this also to the government of Australia: we have the same concerns. It does not reflect our values … and therefore is condemned and declared disgraceful and harmful to the state.”
Foreign Minister Penny Wong on Thursday morning condemned the actions as “shocking and unacceptable” and ordered Newman to appear before DFAT. A meeting between Australian officials and the ambassador took place late on Thursday afternoon.
“The images we have seen posted by Israeli minister Ben-Gvir – who Australia has sanctioned – are shocking and unacceptable. We condemn his actions and the degrading actions of Israeli authorities towards those detained,” Wong said.
The government has called for all detained Australians travelling on the Global Sumud Flotilla to be released and for Israel to comply with international obligations to treat detainees respectfully.
This is the second time Israel’s ambassador to Australia has been called in, after his predecessor Amir Maimon was summoned amid accusations of starvation and famine-like conditions in Gaza last July.
(continued)
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d0bc64 No.24629137
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>>24629136
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Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni was among the most vocal critics of Ben-Gvir’s behaviour, calling it a “violation of human dignity” and summoning Israel’s ambassador to Rome. The US ambassador to Israel and strong supporter of the nation’s settler movement, Mike Huckabee, called Ben-Gvir’s actions “despicable”, saying he had “betrayed the dignity of his nation”.
The Australia Israel & Jewish Affairs Council, the Executive Council of Australian Jewry and the Zionist Federation of Australia echoed Netanyahu and Newman’s condemnation of Ben-Gvir and the flotilla participants.
Ben-Gvir was filmed walking among some of the approximately 430 detained activists who tried to breach Israel’s blockade of Gaza, and telling them they should face lengthy imprisonment.
“Welcome to Israel, we are the landlords,” says Ben-Gvir, waving a large Israeli flag. One handcuffed activist shouts “free Palestine” and is immediately pushed to the ground by security personnel as Ben-Gvir walks by.
In another video, Ben-Gvir says the activists “came here all full of pride like big heroes. Look at them now”, while appealing to Netanyahu to grant him permission to imprison them.
Asked whether Ben-Gvir would be able to act in a similar manner should he be re-elected, Newman said: “Any politician can do something tomorrow morning … He’s been condemned by the leadership, by the prime minister and the foreign minister, but in the end he’s not hurt anyone, he’s not attacked anyone”.
Israel’s Foreign Minister Gideon Saar publicly chastised Ben-Gvir on X, saying: “You knowingly caused harm to our State in this disgraceful display … you are not the face of Israel”.
Australians Neve O’Connor, Sam Woripa Watson, Anny Mokotow, Isla Lamont, Juliet Lamont, Surya McEwen, Zack Schofield, Bianca Webb-Pullman, Gemma O’Toole, Violet Coco and Helen O’Sullivan were all detained by Israel earlier this week.
Flotilla organisers and DFAT were yet to speak to the Australians on Thursday afternoon, but were expected to contact them later in the day.
“The legal team is in constant communication with DFAT, but unfortunately, both the legal team and the Australian family members, we’re still in the dark,” Bernadette Zaydan, a lawyer representing the majority of the Australian participants, said.
“We know that there are some serious injuries that have been sustained by some of the participants, but we don’t know if any Australians were affected.”
Netanyahu has given instructions for the activists to be deported “as soon as possible”,
The Legal Centre for Arab Minority Rights in Israel accused the nation’s authorities of “employing a criminal policy of abuse and humiliation against activists”, arguing that Israel had faced “zero accountability” for its actions against subsequent flotilla missions.
Flotilla organisers claimed Israeli soldiers fired on five boats during their interception, causing some damage.
Newman rebuffed this claim, saying interceptions “took place within the most sensitive manner” and that no one was harmed.
Israeli forces intercepted the flotilla, which set off from Turkey last week, about 268 kilometres off the Gaza coastline, according to the flotilla’s website.
https://www.theage.com.au/world/middle-east/netanyahu-scolds-hardline-minister-for-releasing-videos-taunting-detained-flotilla-activists-20260521-p5zza5.html
https://x.com/itamarbengvir/status/2057046925417824697
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_i_kf65Yquo
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6eqGuti2Cfg
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d0bc64 No.24636038
YouTube embed. Click thumbnail to play.
>>24603494
>>24629136
Israeli ambassador criticises Ben-Gvir's video but calls Gaza flotilla a 'provocation'
Paul Johnson - 21 May 2026
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Israel's ambassador to Australia, Hillel Newman, has stopped short of apologising to the Global Sumud Flotilla activists detained in Israel, who were taunted by Ben-Gvir.
He also told 7.30 that activists on the flotilla had not been harmed, but Australian man Chris O'Connor, whose daughter Neve was on board, rejected that claim as untrue.
Ben-Gvir, who is Israel's national security minister, has been condemned by world leaders for a video in which he is seen taunting some of the more than 400 activists being held at Israel's Ashdod Port after they were intercepted and detained in international waters.
The group includes 11 Australians.
"The actions of Ben-Gvir himself have been condemned from wall-to-wall," Mr Newman told 7.30.
"The leadership of Israel has condemned what he did. It's disgraceful.
"That's the approach of the government of Israel.
"The prime minister of Israel, the foreign minister of Israel, [they] have all condemned thoroughly the actions of Ben-Gvir."
Federal government MP Julian Hill called for Mr Ben-Gvir to be sacked.
"To tolerate that man remaining a cabinet minister for one more day seems unconscionable," Mr Hill said.
"If Prime Minister Netanyahu were serious about those values and Israel's reputation, he'd sack him."
Mr Newman said Ben-Gvir could not be removed from government because of the looming Israeli election.
"The law in Israel is such that when a transitional government begins, you cannot expel," Mr Newman said.
"You can't change the format of a government until we go to elections."
Allegations of violence
Mr Newman denied that anyone on the flotilla would have been hurt and told 7.30 that any past or current allegations of violence or sexual humiliation were untrue.
"There's been no sexual humiliation," he said.
"I refute that completely.
"There's been no sexual attacks of any kind against the flotilla people.
"There are many accusations that are thrown out there, which are untrue. The government of Israel and the security forces of Israel have intercepted all these flotillas with great sensitivity.
"No one was hurt. The interception was done very smoothly."
That comment was then rejected by Mr O'Connor, live on 7.30 as he made allegations that beatings and rape had occurred.
"I absolutely reject that," he told 7.30.
"I will share with you what Neve has told me.
"The first time she was held hostage, she was beaten, and she was subject to psychological torture.
"She was hospitalised in Crete. And as she said to me, the beatings were not bad compared to what happened to men of colour.
"When she arrived in Türkiye, she was really weighing up whether she would do the final leg to Gaza.
"Part of the reason was that she spoke to two people who had [allegedly] been raped two weeks ago on the prison ship, one male, one female."
(continued)
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d0bc64 No.24636040
>>24636038
2/2
Mr O'Connor then said his daughter told him she felt she needed to rejoin the flotilla for moral reasons before he detailed more allegations as to where her alleged beating occurred.
"It was on the prison ship, and it was the IOF or the IDF," he said.
"She said she was kneed in the face [and was] punched in the ribs.
"The psychological torture she had was being in a stress position for many hours. They were sprayed with water and were subject to hypothermic conditions overnight.
"There were plenty of photos of people who had bruises."
'Unnecessary provocation'
After defending Israel's actions but condemning Mr Ben-Gvir, the Israeli ambassador said the fact that the flotilla existed at all was problematic.
"The flotilla itself is a provocation which is unnecessary," he said.
"It's trying to break a legal blockade of Gaza, which is necessary for the security of the people of Israel."
A spokesperson for Foreign Affairs Minister Penny Wong said on Wednesday that the government wanted to "see all detained Australians released as soon as possible".
"The Australian government is engaging with Israeli authorities on the welfare of detained Australians involved in the flotilla and making preparations to visit them at the earliest opportunity," they said.
Mr Newman said that all the 400-plus people on the flotilla are now in the process of being deported.
"No one is in harm's way."
https://www.abc.net.au/news/2026-05-21/israel-ambassador-wont-apologise-for-ben-gvir-actions/106707956
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u-Fn8bO7ZrY
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d0bc64 No.24636052
>>24603494
>>24629136
>>24636038
Eleven Australian activists from Global Sumud Flotilla released
abc.net.au - 22 May 2026
Eleven Australian activists who were part of the Global Sumud Flotilla crew detained by Israel are now in Türkiye.
Israel said it had deported all the foreign activists seized by its forces on Thursday, local time, as the first group arrived in Türkiye following global outcry over their treatment in custody.
On Friday afternoon the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade (DFAT) confirmed 11 Australian activists were released by Israel and were met by Australians officials in Türkiye.
"No Australians required immediate medical attention, beyond the provision of basic first aid supplies," a spokesperson said.
"Along with other countries, Australia has raised our concerns with Israeli authorities about the treatment of detainees and delays in providing consular access in line with international obligations.
"We continue to urge Australians not to attempt to break the Israeli naval blockade as they will be putting the safety of themselves and others at risk."
The 11 Australians who were detained are Neve O'Connor, Sam Woripa Watson, Anny Mokotow, Isla Lamont, Juliet Lamont, Surya McEwen, Zack Schofield, Bianca Webb-Pullman, Gemma O'Toole, Violet Coco and Helen O'Sullivan.
Upon arrival in Istanbul, activist Ms Lamont said it was "chaos" in the airport as they tried to regroup with other members of the flotilla.
Mr Schofield said the group of activists were "taken to prison and treated really poorly".
"Many of us haven't eaten for days," he said, speaking at Istanbul Airport to local media.
"I have friends that were shocked with tasers, stun guns for extended periods of time just on entry to prison, were beaten."
After being released overnight, Ms O'Connor recorded a video testimony in which she alleges that she was "brutalised" by the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) while she was held captive.
"My shoulders were almost dislocated. I was kneed in the face again, I was kneed in the stomach," Ms O'Connor said.
"I had my head slammed into a table multiple times, I was kicked in the ankles so that I would fall … it was just constant abuse and oppression."
The ABC has contacted the IDF for comment in response to the allegations.
On Thursday evening, Israel's ambassador to Australia, Hillel Newman, told ABC 7.30 that activists on the flotilla had not been harmed.
"There are many accusations that are thrown out there, which are untrue," he said.
"The government of Israel and the security forces of Israel have intercepted all these flotillas with great sensitivity.
"No-one was hurt. The interception was done very smoothly."
A spokesperson for the flotilla group said the Australian activists were going through health checks at a local hospital.
They are expected to return to Australia in the coming days.
422 activists released
Hundreds of activists from countries around the world were placed in detention in Israel after they were intercepted at sea on Monday, while making the latest in a string of attempts to break the blockade of the Palestinian territory.
Turkish foreign ministry sources said 422 activists, among them 85 Turkish nationals, were flown from southern Israel on three planes chartered by Ankara.
Israel's far-right national security minister, Itamar Ben-Gvir, sparked widespread condemnation and a diplomatic backlash by posting a video showing the detained activists with their hands tied and foreheads on the ground.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu defended the interception of the flotilla but said Mr Ben-Gvir's treatment of the activists was "not in line with Israel's values and norms".
Israeli ambassador Mr Newman said Israel's leadership condemned the actions of Mr Ben-Gvir.
"The prime minister of Israel, the foreign minister of Israel, [they] have all condemned thoroughly the actions of Ben-Gvir," he said.
Yesterday, DFAT also condemned Mr Ben-Gvir's actions "and the degrading actions of Israeli authorities towards those detained".
"Australia's ambassador to Israel has made representations to Israel, reiterating our call for the release of the detained Australians and for Israel to ensure no ill treatment of any detainees and to act in line with international obligations," Foreign Affairs Minister Penny Wong said in a statement.
"I also directed DFAT to call in Israel's ambassador to Australia to reinforce this message."
Since then, Israel's foreign ministry spokesperson, Oren Marmorstein, said that "all foreign activists from the PR flotilla have been deported from Israel".
"Israel will not permit any breach of the lawful naval blockade on Gaza," he added.
https://www.abc.net.au/news/2026-05-22/australian-activists-released-from-israel-detention/106710590
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d0bc64 No.24636062
>>24621717
Final group of ISIS brides and children extracted from Syrian camp for return to Australia
MOHAMMAD ALFARES - 23 May 2026
The remaining former ISIS brides and their children are expected to arrive in Australia as early as next week after being extracted from Syria’s al-Roj camp on Thursday.
The seven women and their 13 children had been trapped in the internment camp for the better part of a decade following the fall of the Islamic caliphate in March 2019.
As The Australian revealed this week, urgent negotiations had been taking place to facilitate their removal after the US State Department intervened, and an agreement was struck between Kurdish authorities and the Syrians for urgent repatriations.
An attempt by the Syrians to remove them earlier in the week was halted by the Kurds because they had been seeking some sort of recognition for their role.
But on Thursday morning, Syrian officials pulled up to the camp in a white bus to escort the group to Damascus, where they will be interrogated before making the journey to Australia.
The final decision to authorise their transfer was made by Syria’s Foreign Minister, Asaad al-Shaibani, who approved their departure from the detention camp in the north of the country.
It is understood that although airline tickets had not been purchased, proof of funds had to be issued to the Syrian government.
The group is expected to return to Australia next week, but the timing is contingent on when the flight tickets are bought.
The Australian government was not aware of their plans to travel and could not detail whether anyone would be detained on arrival.
On Friday The Australian revealed how retired lawyer Robert Van Aalst had lined up Australian community members to escort the women in Damascus and Qatar.
Among the group are children with reported medical complications, including one child previously reported to have suffered shrapnel injuries.
Nesrine Zahab, now in her early 30s, travelled from Sydney to the region in her early 20s. She has long maintained she did not knowingly enter Syria. Ms Zahab previously claimed she had been holidaying with relatives in Lebanon before slipping away with a cousin to deliver aid to refugees near the Turkish border.
According to her account, she surrendered her passport and only realised she had crossed into Syria when she saw an Islamic State flag. She later married Australian-born jihadist Ahmed Merhi, who was captured and sentenced to death. Ms Zahab has said marriage was a means of survival.
Her relative, Sumaya Zahab, who now has three children and is also in her early 30s, is the sister of former Sydney maths teacher Muhammad Zahab, who joined Islamic State and was killed in a 2018 airstrike. He was believed to have encouraged several relatives to follow him to Syria.
Their mother, Aminah Zahab, now about 50, also travelled to the conflict zone. Speaking from the Al-Hol camp in 2019, she said: “We’re clueless parents. We had a lot of trust in our children, a lot of trust.”
Her youngest son, Yusuf, is believed to be in an Iraqi prison and negotiations are under way to try to repatriate him.
Another woman, Kirsty Rosse-Emile, with two children, has spoken about wanting to reunite with her mother and take her children to the beach in Australia, while saying that how she ended up in Syria “might make problems for me”.
In 2020, it was reported that her Moroccan-born husband, Nabil Kadmiry, had been stripped of his Australian citizenship.
Hodan Abby, with one child, left western Sydney for Syria in 2015 as a teenager, seeking to become a jihadi bride.
Little is publicly known about Kawsar Kanj but it is understood she has five children and suffers from disabilities, while another woman called Hyam Raad has two children.
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation/final-group-of-isis-brides-and-children-extracted-from-syrian-camp-for-return-to-australia/news-story/a64063699056c4fd2fdccf2cf67900e5
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d0bc64 No.24636076
>>24621717
>>24636062
Revealed: The retired Jewish lawyer who secretly orchestrated return of ISIS brides
MOHAMMAD ALFARES - 23 May 2026
1/2
He’s the retired Jewish lawyer who quietly pulled the strings in one of Australia’s most politically explosive operations: the return of the ISIS brides and their children from Syria.
While Sydney doctor Jamal Rifi became the public face of negotiations to repatriate stranded Australian women from a tumultuous detention camp in northeast Syria back in February, the real mastermind operating behind the scenes is retired lawyer and human rights campaigner Robert Van Aalst.
After the remaining Australians were plucked away from the squalid al-Roj detention camp by Syrian officials on Thursday night, The Australian can reveal Van Aalst emerged as the central figure controlling communications between families, intermediaries and overseas contacts during the final stages of the operation.
Sources directly involved in the latest negotiations say Van Aalst has spent the past few months orchestrating confidential meetings, managing travel logistics, liaising with Syrian-linked contacts and, most recently, privately speaking to up to four Australians being lined up to travel to the Middle East to help facilitate the latest extraction.
At least one Australian community member is expected to travel into Damascus after flight tickets are secured, while others could be stationed in Qatar and elsewhere in the region to escort the women and children back to Australia.
“He’s controlling everything,” one source said. “He wants everything under his control.”
Van Aalst’s role first became publicly visible this month, when The Australian witnessed him leaving Melbourne Magistrates Court alongside Abraham Abbas after his relatives, accused slave owners Kawsar Abbas and daughter Zeinab Ahmad, were remanded in custody on May 11.
At the time, little was known about why Van Aalst was present at court or his connection this year to the wider ISIS repatriation network.
But multiple sources have now confirmed Van Aalst has become embedded in the operation surrounding the women’s return, including maintaining close contact with relatives and obtaining unusual levels of access after some women arrived back in Australia.
The Australian understands Van Aalst, who did not respond to questions but prides himself online for having four decades of legal experience, has been able to visit at least some of the returned ISIS brides while they remain in custody, with sources saying his status as a lawyer provided him with access even relatives did not have.
The extraordinary behind-the-scenes role played by Van Aalst has blindsided even some figures involved in earlier repatriation efforts, particularly given the unusual alliance between a retired Jewish lawyer from Sydney and families linked to Australians who joined ISIS a decade ago.
But supporters say Van Aalst earned the trust of families after years of unpaid advocacy, legal assistance and constant engagement with relatives desperate to bring children home from the camps.
Some have accused Van Aalst of operating with extreme secrecy during the final stages of negotiations, including organising face-to-face meetings where people were asked to leave phones and smartwatches outside rooms before discussions began.
“He’d take his watch off, his phone off, and leave them in the car,” one source said.
“Everyone had to leave their phones in different rooms.”
The cloak-and-dagger atmosphere surrounding the operation comes as the Syrian government pushed to finalise the women’s departures from Kurdish-controlled territory on Thursday night local time.
The Australian revealed this week that Syrian authorities had stepped in to unlock travel funds and finalise flight arrangements for the remaining Australian women and children, amid pressure from the US State Department and growing tensions with Kurdish authorities controlling the camps.
Sources said Syrian officials wanted proof of funds or booked airline tickets before facilitating transfers out of the camps and into Damascus. This took place on Thursday evening, and a bus, with a convoy, was sent to pick up the women and children as promised.
Australia’s Islamic organisations and some of the most prominent Muslim figures in the country had also rallied behind funding efforts, including MyCentre director Abu Hamza (Samir Mohtadi), the man who loathed Zionists in fiery sermons first revealed by The Australian last year. Other organisations include the Australian National Imams Council, run by Anthony Albanese’s confidant, Sheik Shadi Alsuleiman, and the Australian Federation of Islamic Councils’ Melbourne affiliate, the Islamic Council of Victoria.
(continued)
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d0bc64 No.24636077
>>24636076
2/2
Initially, funds intended for flights became tangled in disputes over travel agency refunds and payment arrangements, with frustrations boiling over among some supporters who believe the final stages of the repatriation effort have become overly centralised around Van Aalst.
The internal tensions worsened after a failed attempt earlier this year by Mr Abbas and Ahmad Alameddine, who travelled to Syria hoping to facilitate the extraction of all of the women before approvals had been fully finalised.
That operation collapsed after Kurdish authorities intervened.
The fallout significantly weakened the role of Rifi on the ground, despite him previously being tasked by families with leading negotiations and using contacts in Lebanon and Syria to establish diplomatic pathways.
“Everyone thinks Jamal Rifi was running this,” one source said. “He wasn’t. It was Robert. He was the one pulling all of the strings.”
According to insiders, Van Aalst ultimately became the dominant figure after gaining control of key Syrian contact networks established during the failed extraction attempt. Those contacts were passed on to him by the Australian helpers.
The Australian understands some relatives of the ISIS brides became fearful of speaking publicly about the operations, amid concerns raised by the former lawyer that media attention could jeopardise the repatriations.
Others insist Van Aalst’s secrecy has become excessive.
“They were so afraid to speak out because they thought Robert could leave their relatives behind in the camp,” one source said. “But that is not true, he can’t stop them from coming.”
Despite the tensions, it was clear there was growing confidence that the women and children would eventually be returned to Australia.
Among those travelling are children with reported medical complications, including one child previously reported to have suffered shrapnel injuries.
The remaining 18:
Nesrine Zahab, now in her early 30s, travelled from Sydney to the region in her early 20s. She has long maintained she did not knowingly enter Syria. She previously claimed she had been holidaying with relatives in Lebanon before slipping away with a cousin to deliver aid to refugees near the Turkish border.
According to her account, she surrendered her passport and only realised she had crossed into Syria when she saw an Islamic State flag.
She later married Australian-born jihadist Ahmed Merhi, who was captured and sentenced to death. Zahab has said marriage was a means of survival.
Her relative, Sumaya Zahab, also in her early 30s and who now has three children, is the sister of former Sydney maths teacher Muhammad Zahab, who joined Islamic State and was killed in a 2018 airstrike. He was believed to have encouraged several relatives to follow him to Syria.
Their mother, Amina Zahab, now about 50, also travelled to the conflict zone. Speaking from the al-Hol camp in 2019, she voiced regret. “We’re clueless parents. We had a lot of trust in our children, a lot of trust,” she said at the time. “We didn’t know how to do much things in life. As we raised our children, and we just let the children rule our lives. I feel very angry. I feel very devastated. I feel sore, pain.”
Amina’s youngest son, Yusuf, who was lost in Syria at a young age, is believed to be in an Iraqi prison and negotiations are still under way to try to repatriate him.
Another woman, Kirsty Rosse-Emile, who has two children, has spoken about wanting to reunite with her mother and take her children to the beach in Australia, while explaining that how she ended up in Syria “might make problems for me”.
In 2020, it was reported that her Moroccan-born husband, Nabil Kadmiry, had been stripped of his Australian citizenship.
Hodan Abby, with one child, left western Sydney for Syria in 2015 as a teenager, seeking to become a so-called jihadi bride.
Little is publicly known about Kawsar Kanj but it is understood she has five children and suffers from disabilities, while another woman, Hyam Raad, has two children.
The Australian has chosen at this stage not to identify the woman with the exclusion order.
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation/revealed-the-retired-jewish-lawyer-who-secretly-orchestrated-the-return-of-isis-brides/news-story/450136740f27d2bfc5dbef6295644d07
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d0bc64 No.24636140
>>24616963
>>24629102
Mystery challenge to Andrews-era corruption report revives calls for law changes
Chip Le Grand - May 22, 2026
1/2
Victoria’s peak anti-corruption body says the latest attempt to stymie a long-running investigation into dealings between former premier Daniel Andrews and a union boss shows it needs greater powers to do its job.
Two mystery parties who cannot be identified for legal reasons have launched Supreme Court action to stop the Independent Broad-based Anti-corruption Commission publishing a report into corruption allegations centred on 10-year-old dealings between Andrews and United Firefighters Union national secretary Peter Marshall.
Although the case has been listed for a “rapid hearing” at the end of next month, it forced IBAC to shelve its unpublished report into Operation Richmond, an anti-corruption probe in which both Andrews and Marshall were privately questioned about their conduct.
IBAC Commissioner Victoria Elliott – the third commissioner to have carriage of the Richmond investigation – said her agency’s powers needed to be boosted to enable it to hold more public hearings.
If these powers had been in place when Operation Richmond began, both Andrews and Marshall would have been questioned in open hearings and their sworn testimony widely reported.
“As a general principle of public integrity, Victorians deserve to know more about IBAC’s efforts to expose and prevent corruption and police misconduct – and we want to tell you,” Elliott said in a statement released on Friday.
“But to do that, IBAC’s legislation needs to change, as it currently limits our ability to share what we believe to be in the public interest.
“Victorians want – and should have – greater insight into what is being done to address allegations of corruption and misconduct.”
Under the current laws, IBAC must demonstrate “exceptional circumstances” to hold public hearings and clear significant legal hurdles to publish its findings.
A preliminary Supreme Court hearing into the fresh legal challenge was told on Friday that IBAC’s entire report into Operation Richmond was provided to one of the unnamed plaintiffs on Thursday. This was done to satisfy the agency’s requirement to provide natural justice to anyone subject to adverse findings.
The latest twist in Operation Richmond has elevated Victoria’s anti-corruption framework, which is substantially weaker than that in force in NSW, to a state election issue. Shadow attorney-general James Newbury said a Coalition government would give IBAC greater powers if elected.
“Corruption is growing in Victoria, and the Coalition will stamp it out,” Newbury told The Age.
“The Coalition will provide IBAC with follow-the-money powers, we will stop hearings from being held almost solely behind closed doors, and we commit to doing whatever it takes to publicly release the Operation Richmond corruption report.”
It was unclear after Friday’s hearing before Justice Claire Harris whether the Operation Richmond report will be published before the November 28 election.
Lawyers for the unidentified plaintiffs failed in an application to permanently conceal their identities – the application was opposed by IBAC and media companies including The Age – but immediately flagged an appeal.
Whatever the outcome of the “rapid hearing” into the substantive issues raised in the case, the plaintiffs will have further appeal rights.
(continued)
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d0bc64 No.24636142
>>24636140
2/2
The lawyers behind this latest legal manoeuvre – Slater and Gordon head of industrial and employment law Geoff Borenstein and senior counsel Nicholas Wood, SC – are the same team who took IBAC to the High Court three years ago. The United Firefighters Union was one of the plaintiffs in that case, which was a spin-off investigation from Operation Richmond.
IBAC was poised to publish its final report into Operation Richmond on Monday before the latest legal challenge was launched.
Legal counsel for IBAC Frances Gordon, KC, on Friday gave an undertaking to Harris that the anti-corruption agency would not publish the report, or provide any further advance copies of it to other parties, before the court dealt with the legal challenge.
“I think there is a real public interest in this moving very quickly,” the judge said.
The court on Friday took a series of extraordinary steps to preserve the anonymity of the mystery litigants. The case was filed as “Restricted v Independent Broad-based Anti-Corruption Commission”, the court file concealed from public view and part of Friday’s hearing held behind closed doors.
A lawyer representing The Age and other media groups, Justin Quill from Thompsons, was refused permission to remain in court while the identity of the plaintiff was discussed.
“It is hard to imagine a matter in this court that has a greater public interest,” Quill told the judge. “This court is being asked to restrict the flow of information to our parliament. That is an extraordinary thing that your honour is being asked to do.
“The public has an enormous interest in understanding the reasons why … and what is going on.”
This masthead has previously reported that in December 2021, Andrews was privately examined by IBAC in relation to Operation Richmond and three other IBAC investigations.
Four-and-a-half years later, Victorians have been provided no details of what their state’s most senior politician told IBAC in relation to his dealings with a powerful union leader.
Final reports into the other matters – operations Daintree, Sandon and Watts – have all been published. None contained findings of corrupt conduct against Andrews.
Andrews in 2022 refused to confirm whether he had been examined by IBAC. “If you want to know what IBAC has done or hasn’t done, who they’ve done it with, then you should go and talk to them,” he told reporters.
The Operation Richmond investigation centred on a contentious enterprise agreement struck between the United Firefighters Union and the Andrews government in 2016.
In the lead-up to the 2014 state election, which returned Labor to power, firefighters acting on the instructions of the union campaigned for Labor at marginal seat polling booths.
Then-emergency services minister Jane Garrett, who died in 2022, was responsible for negotiating the EBA with Marshall, the union’s long-serving national secretary. She quit her post in protest after Andrews intervened in negotiations and struck a deal with Marshall that gave the union unprecedented influence over the operations of the Country Fire Authority.
Operation Richmond began in 2019 under former IBAC commissioner Robert Redlich and was largely complete when he left office in 2022. The investigation continued under acting commissioner Stephen Farrow and is now being overseen by Elliott, who took over the agency in 2023.
https://www.theage.com.au/politics/victoria/mystery-challenge-to-andrews-era-corruption-report-revives-calls-for-law-changes-20260522-p5zzrl.html
https://www.ibac.vic.gov.au/Statement-from-IBAC-Commissioner
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d0bc64 No.24636188
>>24592922 (pb)
Penny Wong signals interest in new Solomon Islands’ security pact
BEN PACKHAM - May 21, 2026
1/2
Australia’s “job will never be done” countering Chinese influence in the Pacific, Foreign Minister Penny Wong has declared, as she flagged the government’s willingness to upgrade security ties with Solomon Islands under the country’s new leader, Matthew Wale.
In an exclusive interview with The Australian, Senator Wong said “democracy has spoken” in Solomon Islands, where longtime opposition leader and China critic Mr Wale was elected Prime Minister last week.
She said Australia was “very enthusiastic” about working with Honiara, and was open to upgrading the countries’ 2017 security treaty if Mr Wale and his government were prepared to do so.
“We congratulate him on his election, and we were looking forward to engaging with him and with the new government on Solomon Islands,” Senator Wong said. “We’re open to elevation of our relationships with the Solomon Islands, or with any Pacific country, but obviously we’ll listen to what the government and people in Solomon Islands want.”
Underscoring her past warning over Australia’s “permanent state of contest” with China in the Pacific, Senator Wong declared: “Our job will never be done, and Australia’s success demands sustained effort, and that’s what we’re delivering.”
Solomon Islands has been one of the most pro-China countries in the region, signing a controversial security pact with Beijing in 2022 under former prime minister Manasseh Sogavare, who is now opposition leader.
It allowed the deployment of Chinese police to the country, which The Australian revealed last year were fingerprinting Solomon Islands’ citizens and getting them to fill out household registration cards under the guise of “community policing”.
The deal complicated Australia’s longstanding policing support for the country and future assistance under a $190m commitment by Anthony Albanese to build a new police academy in Honiara and provincial policing posts. Senator Wong said the Albanese government had made clear that security support in the region should be provided by the Pacific Island Forum, of which Australia is a member.
Australia has committed $400m to a region-wide policing initiative, is pouring resources into fighting the flow of drugs through the Pacific, and is working with regional partners to develop a rapidly deployable natural disaster response group.
“We’re ramping up our efforts in the Pacific. Why are we doing that? It’s because it’s the region where Australia’s interests are most on the line,” she said.
Her comments came as Australia works to finalise a new security and economic treaty with Fiji and a security agreement with Vanuatu.
The Vanuatu deal has been held up by Port Vila, which has challenged Canberra to drop its demand for a veto over Chinese investments in critical sectors amid parallel negotiations with Beijing on a bilateral economic agreement.
(continued)
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d0bc64 No.24636189
>>24636188
2/2
Senator Wong said it would take “a bit longer” before either the Vanuatu or Fiji pact was concluded. She said it was critical that countries maintained their “economic resilience”, amid high levels of indebtedness to China among some Pacific nations.
Chinese lenders currently own about 30 per cent of Vanuatu’s debt, 50 per cent of Tonga’s, and 35 per cent of Samoa’s.
Senator Wong said it was critical that Pacific nations were not left in a position where they were unable to service their loans.
“When we provide assistance to countries of the region, we do it in a way that is sustainable, and in a way that seeks to strengthen their resilience for them, for their people, but also for the stability of the region,” she said.
Australia’s most pressing concern is that China could leverage security deals, high levels of indebtedness and relationships with Pacific elites to establish a permanent military presence in the region.
Some have described the strategic contest as a “knife fight” or a never-ending game of “whack a mole” which Australia needs to win every time but China only needs to win once to get what it wants.
Pacific analysts have said Mr Wale’s election in Solomon Islands is a positive development for Australia but downplayed the prospect of a major re-evaluation by Honiara of its relationship with Beijing.
“He may tweak policy in ways that don’t favour China, but I don’t think there’s a prospect of decisive shift against China,” former Australian ambassador to Solomon Islands James Batley said.
Beijing’s envoy to Solomon Islands, ambassador Cai Weiming, met with Mr Wale last week, declaring “China is ready to work with his new government to expand practical co-operation in various fields”.
In a statement, Mr Cai said the Prime Minister had committed to working closely with the country to promote “all-round friendship and co-operation”.
Mr Wale opposed the country’s security agreement with China and its 2019 move to ditch diplomatic ties with Taiwan, accusing Mr Sogavare of “sleazing up to Beijing, trying to kiss their feet”.
He told the ABC before the country’s last election he would publish the text of the security pact, details of which have been kept secret, but stopped short of saying he would overturn the deal.
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation/politics/penny-wong-signals-interest-in-new-solomon-islands-security-pact/news-story/62fe333d419837dcd0e9b051447c1484
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d0bc64 No.24636207
>>24599875
UK police considering sexual misconduct, corruption claims against Andrew
JACQUELIN MAGNAY - May 22, 2026
1/2
In a bombshell development in the investigation into Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor, British police have broadened their probe to include claims of sexual misconduct and corruption.
Mountbatten-Windsor, the former Prince Andrew, is already under investigation on suspicion of committing misconduct in a public office but police are now making an appeal for any witnesses who may have information about any alleged sexual misconduct to come forward.
Mountbatten-Windsor was arrested at Sandringham on his 66th birthday three months ago on suspicion of committing misconduct in a public office during his time as the UK trade and investment envoy.
He is being investigated for allegedly passing on sensitive information to Jeffrey Epstein in that role. This includes details contained in the Epstein files of official reports forwarded from the then Prince’s office to Epstein from official trips to Hong Kong, Singapore, Vietnam and China in 2010.
Police are still combing through reams of information obtained from the February seizure of electronic equipment from Mountbatten’s properties in Sandringham and Royal Lodge.
But in hugely damaging news that has rocked the royal family, it has emerged that Thames Valley Police is also looking into claims that the convicted sex abuser Jeffrey Epstein trafficked a woman into the United Kingdom in 2010 in order for her to have sex with Mountbatten-Windsor at Royal Lodge in Windsor.
The woman has not yet been interviewed by the police as she hasn’t made a formal complaint, although officers have been in touch with her lawyer, who also represented the late Virginia Giuffre.
The woman has previously claimed Epstein flew her to London and she spent the night with the then Prince Andrew at Royal Lodge, his then residence near Windsor. She said the next morning she was taken on a private tour of Buckingham Palace and was given tea.
The police have stressed “their doors remain open,” as they encourage any women abused by Epstein to contact officers if they had information that would assist their investigation.
Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) guidelines say that an individual can be guilty of misconduct in a public office if they use their position to instigate “sexual or inappropriate relationships”.
If any charges are to be laid, the prosecutors would have to prove any misconduct – whether it was sexual, or corruption and fraud – was a “wilful abuse of power”.
(continued)
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d0bc64 No.24636209
>>24636207
2/2
Oliver Wright, the Thames Valley Assistant Chief Constable, said: “Misconduct in public office is a crime that can take different forms, making this a complex investigation.
“Our team of very experienced detectives are working meticulously through a significant amount of information that has come in from the public and other sources.
“We are committed to conducting a thorough investigation into all reasonable lines of inquiry, wherever they may lead.
“We encourage anyone with information to get in touch with us through the normal non-urgent contact channels, such as the Thames Valley Police online portal.
“I understand the high level of interest in this work, but please be patient as we continue to actively progress our investigation.”
Mr Wright added that the police were in contact with US officials and that his team is already liaising with the Crown Prosecution Service for early investigative advice.
“We’re encouraging anyone with information to get in touch with us,’’ he said.
“In terms of Epstein victims and survivors, we hope that anyone with relevant information will come forward, and I really want to stress that our door is open.”
The late Virginia Giuffre said she was trafficked to have sex with Mountbatten-Windsor in London in 2001.
Buckingham Palace Royal is unable to comment while there is an active police inquiry for fear of prejudicing any investigation.
King Charles stripped his brother of titles and honours last year and moved him out of Royal Lodge.
Mountbatten-Windsor has not directly commented on the investigation and latest claims. However he had robustly denied any meeting with Ms Giuffre when it was put to him in a disastrous BBC interview in November 2019.
“It didn’t happen. I can absolutely categorically tell you it never happened,” he insisted.
“I have no recollection of ever meeting this lady, none whatsoever.”
Newly released government files revealed on Friday (AEST) that Queen Elizabeth personally pressed for Mountbatten to be given the trade envoy role, despite concerns over his profile and limited business experience.
Previously secret files disclosed that the late Queen was “very keen” for her second son, often described as her favourite, to succeed the Duke of Kent as a special representative for trade and investment, a role that would give him access to senior ministers, diplomats and business leaders around the world.
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/world/uk-police-considering-sexual-misconduct-corruption-claims-against-andrew/news-story/9d89d77ec1d726d3a8e17ff3d9c8ff9a
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d0bc64 No.24636284
>>24599898
>>24599907
Kevin Rudd lifts lid on AUKUS, China and Trump-era tensions
Peter Hartcher and Michael Koziol - May 22, 2026
1/2
The AUKUS submarine project has passed the point of no return and will be delivered successfully, says Australia’s recently departed ambassador to the US, Kevin Rudd.
“There is zero possibility of this coming unstuck,” Rudd said in his first Australian interview since leaving government service last month. It is the most emphatic expression of confidence yet by any of the high-level architects of AUKUS.
He confessed that he had harboured doubts about the joint Australian-UK-US undertaking, announced nearly five years ago, until the moment in October when US President Donald Trump declared publicly that AUKUS was “full steam ahead”.
The former Australian prime minister said: “I have a high degree of confidence – beyond the normal political chutzpah and the normal defence-of-record stuff – that, by the time we hit 2032, you’re going to have the first Virginia-class boat delivered” by the US to Australia on time.
At the same time, Rudd – who is an expert on China, a Mandarin speaker, and the author of a book on Chinese President Xi Jinping – said that China had not surpassed the US as the dominant world power “yet”. But, he said, it continued to move towards forcibly seizing control of Taiwan.
“Irrespective of President Trump’s posture and policy, I think you’d have to say that the risks of Chinese military action against Taiwan continue to increase,” he said.
“It would be foolhardy publicly to speculate on any timetable around that, but it’s not going in reverse.”
Rudd resigned from the ambassador’s post after three years – a year before his full term – at the end of March to resume his former job as head of the New York-based Asia Society, a 70-year-old cultural institute with an affiliated think tank, the Asia Society Policy Institute.
His “galvanising interest”, he said, was that “I don’t want us to end up in crisis, conflict and war over Taiwan”. He said he didn’t want to overestimate his influence but that “I’ve worked on this for decades” and would do what he could to avert war. A clash between the US and China would be “unbelievably catastrophic”.
Asked about Trump’s recent visit to Beijing, Rudd said he was not bothered by the US president discussing arms sales to Taiwan with Xi, as Trump had made no changes to US policy.
Beijing, he argued, would be deeply uncertain about how Trump would respond to any unilateral military action against Taiwan, because of the priority he places on showing strength.
Rudd also acknowledged challenges ahead for the Albanese government in managing the Trump administration’s expectations on digital governance.
The US has criticised Australia’s local content requirements for streaming platforms, and says it is monitoring Australia’s News Bargaining Incentive for any disproportionate effects on American companies.
“Obviously, there are complex negotiations to be had here,” Rudd said. “The disagreements … in my judgment would be relatively minor, and I think manageable. But I don’t want to underestimate some of the challenges.”
There were differing views within the administration about Australia’s social media ban for children under 16, he added.
(continued)
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d0bc64 No.24636287
>>24636284
2/2
Explaining his confidence in the success of AUKUS, Rudd noted that it was legislated by the US Congress, where it enjoys bipartisan support, and had now been endorsed by presidents from both sides of politics. Rudd helped steer the enabling legislation through Congress.
Significant work had already taken place on readying Australian shipyards for AUKUS, he noted.
“Operationally, on the ground, both in terms of the massive investments in preparatory work being undertaken at Fleet Base West for the submarine home-porting facility for our future fleet, together with supporting visiting American and British vessels, plus the massive investment unfolding in Osborne in South Australia, I see negligible risk of this coming unstuck,” he said.
“Had you asked me before last October when the PM was in town with the president, I would have said there was perhaps some risk.”
Rudd described the US-Australia relationship as being well-placed for the future. He said it was now supported by three pillars, with a fourth under construction. First was AUKUS; second, rare earths and critical minerals co-operation; third, finance based on Australian superannuation investment; and fourth, co-operation on critical tech, including AI.
The “most complex challenge”, he said, was navigating the respective China relationships of the US and Australia, implying that the two allies have diverging priorities.
Rudd has been replaced as ambassador by Greg Moriarty, a long-time diplomat and public servant who was most recently the secretary of Australia’s Defence Department.
He served as ambassador to Iran from 2005 to 2008, and in that capacity briefed then US president George W. Bush on Iranian politics – a rare event for an Australian diplomat. He was later posted to Jakarta, and was also chief of staff to then prime minister Malcolm Turnbull.
Moriarty presented his credentials to Trump at a White House ceremony on Thursday (US time), along with 11 other new ambassadors to the US.
He was greeted at the West Wing by Monica Crowley, the US chief of protocol. Press were not invited to the credentialing ceremony.
https://www.theage.com.au/national/kevin-rudd-lifts-lid-on-aukus-china-and-trump-era-tensions-20260522-p5zzne.html
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d0bc64 No.24636292
>>24611802
AUKUS envoy warns UK and US cannot afford submarine delays for Australia
CAMERON STEWART - 23 May 2026
1/2
Britain and the US can no longer afford any delay in delivering nuclear submarines to Australia because of the growing challenge of keeping the navy’s ageing Collins-class boats in service, Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer’s Special Representative on AUKUS has warned.
Sir Stephen Lovegrove also says he believes AUKUS will survive the current leadership chaos in Britain and would be retained by any new prime minister because there is deep bipartisan support for the pact.
But he warned both the UK and Australia faced “very significant” challenges ahead to realise the plan to jointly design and build a new generation SSN-AUKUS boat.
In a rare interview in the Cabinet Office in London, Sir Stephen laid bare what he called the “colossal task” ahead for both nations. But he said the UK was completely committed to rejuvenating its own depleted submarine industrial base and jointly creating the next generation of attack-class submarines for both countries, to enter service in the UK in the late 2030s and Australia in the early 2040s.
The submarine force in the UK has been plagued by cost overruns, construction delays, poor maintenance, and reduced operational capacity.
‘There’s no point in pretending that standing up a nuclear endeavour of this type is not really difficult, a colossal task,” he told The Australian. “I mean, you’d be completely disingenuous not to say that it’s really hard, and it’s really expensive, and it requires a lot of clever people to devote a lot of time to do it. So, I mean, there have certainly been teething troubles on the way, but we are working very well … at the moment.”
Sir Stephen alluded to the risk of a capability gap in Australia’s submarine defences between the arrival of nuclear submarines from Britain and the US by saying that the challenges facing the Collins-class fleet made the timely delivery of the AUKUS nuclear submarines more important than ever.
“The best way to de-risk your capabilities in this area is to accelerate the introduction of the class coming down the track, so we have drive-to-dates, which are very ambitious for the production of the AUKUS boats … everybody is completely aware of the need for speed.”
His comments come after the Albanese government this week announced it would dramatically scale back the scope of its original plans to refit the six Collins-class submarines to extend their life for an extra decade.
The decision, caused by the difficult technical challenges of the refit, have cast grave doubt on the ability of the Collins boats to be sent into a conflict, meaning that Australia is likely to face a capability gap in its fleet for much of the 2030s.
(continued)
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d0bc64 No.24636293
>>24636292
2/2
Sir Stephen, a former national security adviser and under-secretary for defence, was appointed by Sir Keir last year to be his Special Representative on AUKUS to help ensure the timely progress of the three-nation pact. He said the current leadership instability in the UK, where would-be successors are circling the beleaguered Labor Prime Minister, would not affect that country’s political commitment to AUKUS.
“I have seen three prime ministers of very different types in place since AUKUS was started, and not a single one of them has demonstrated anything other than full-throated support for AUKUS,” Sir Stephen said.
“Certainly, the Conservative Party is completely behind AUKUS. I mean, it was in power when it was initiated (so) that’s not going to change. The Labor Party is not going to change on this either, for both defence purposes and for the broader industrial picture in this country.
“I would find it very close to impossible to imagine that any responsible government would resile from AUKUS.”
Sir Stephen disputed the findings of a recent UK parliamentary report on AUKUS, which warned that political leadership in the UK on AUKUS had “faded” and that more needed to be done to counter a “political drift”.
“I have not seen a lack of political leadership over here,” he said.
“I’m the Prime Minister’s Special Representative (and) if anything, in the last couple of years, he’s probably stepped up a bit.
“We’ve got pretty good support here, and actually the ‘full steam ahead’ moment with President Trump was very important … so I don’t feel that that’s the case (but) I do think that we cannot afford to let our collective guard drop on impetus and momentum.”
Sir Stephen said he believed the importance of AUKUS had only grown since it was created almost five years ago.
“I think it’s at least as relevant, and I would probably say more relevant, to be honest. The nuclear-powered conventionally armed submarine is without a doubt the most potent and important platform, outside of nuclear deterrence, that any armed force can field, and every country that can build one wants to have more of them.
“It is the platform that can complicate the most consequential decisions of any adversaries’ plans. Australia coming into that club is a colossally important moment.”
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation/defence/aukus-envoy-warns-uk-and-us-cannot-afford-submarine-delays-for-australia/news-story/563d9f2df0fdaf33939334dc8d3907d9
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d0bc64 No.24636328
>>24484771 (pb)
>>24555875 (pb)
>>24621731
Inside Andrew Hastie’s campaign against Ben Roberts-Smith
The senior Liberal MP has played a central role in the campaign to send fellow SAS veteran Ben Roberts-Smith to jail for allegedly executing prisoners.
AARON PATRICK - 22 May 2026
1/6
“You f*cking officers, you always take the easy option,”
Ben Roberts-Smith barked at 25 officers trying to break into the famed Special Air Services Regiment in 2010.
The corporal could not know that among the men he was forcing to ground their knuckles into the red West Australian earth at 3am was an aspiring politician who would play a central role in the destruction of Mr Roberts-Smith’s reputation.
Andrew Hastie, now the Liberal Party representative for the Perth seat of Canning and Opposition industry spokesman, never forgot the bare-knuckle push ups nor how he was spoken to that morning.
Among the SAS veterans who turned on Mr Roberts-Smith, Mr Hastie is one of those whose identities are public, giving him a central role in the campaign to send the war hero to jail. His involvement has turned many of Mr Hastie’s previous supporters against him.
When the Liberal MP posted a photograph of himself laying wreath on Anzac Day — his chest full of medals — roughly half the 883 comments in reply expressed support for Mr Roberts-Smith, who has been charged with five counts of the war crime of murder, or criticised Mr Hastie for turning on his former colleague.
“Is Andrew really going to testify against BRS on the strength of a rumour?” said a comment posted by someone who called themselves James Mack.
Mr Hastie’s hostility towards the Victoria Cross awardee goes far beyond a grudge over an old workplace clash. The politician’s feelings were shaped by his experience with the SAS late in the Afghanistan war, when the regiment had shifted from long-range reconnaissance missions to hunting down and often killing Taliban leaders.
Senior Liberals are concerned that the abuse directed at Mr Hastie, who is often talked about as a future party leader, has taken a toll and could lead him to quit politics. They also worry One Nation, which won a byelection in NSW on May 9, might convince a military veteran to stand against Mr Hastie to tap into the anger over Mr Roberts-Smith’s charges and arrest in front of his partner and teenage daughters at Sydney Airport.
Commentators on Sky News and the Daily Mail have speculated this week that Mr Roberts-Smith may stand against Mr Hastie for election in Canning. Such a step would be difficult, given Mr Roberts-Smith’s bail conditions require him to live in Queensland and to report to a NSW police station three times a week.
Mr Hastie’s office did not respond to a request for comment. A One Nation spokesman said no decisions have been made about candidates in Western Australia. Mr Roberts-Smith hasn’t given interviews since he was released on bail on April 17.
TIGHT SHORTS
Although one was a corporal and the other captain, Mr Roberts-Smith played an outsized role in Mr Hastie’s military career.
They met in the summer of 2009 at Camp Russell, the Australian special forces base in southern Afghanistan where some of the toughest battles of the war were planned. Living at a Dutch base nearby, Mr Hastie was invited to tour the buildings with a friend.
They were greeted by one of the tallest men in the army, a 202cm-tall corporal dressed in tight football shorts, a pistol holstered to his hip. The son of a supreme court judge, radiated the confidence of a young soldier thriving in the army’s top regiment.
He “looked a million dollars,” Mr Hastie said later. “I thought, you know, this is a unit I want to be part of.”
(continued)
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d0bc64 No.24636329
>>24636328
2/6
When he returned to Australia, Mr Hastie applied to the regiment. With 133 other candidates, he endured three gruelling weeks of selection trials at the Bindoon Training Area north of Perth. Mr Roberts-Smith was one of the instructors.
A “blood feud” began between the two men at Bindoon, according to a former commando officer, Heston Russell. Two weeks ago, Mr Russell asserted on a podcast with journalist Karl Stefanovic that the corporal “beasted” Mr Hastie and told the regiment’s selection committee that Mr Hastie should not be allowed to join the SAS, according to Mr Russell.
“There are tribes, there are individuals and there are motives,” Mr Russell said.
'SCUMBAG'
The commando’s account is only partially backed up by people involved. While Mr Hastie was upset by the remark officers “always take the easy option”, the corporal was too lowly ranked to influence the captain’s selection into the SAS, according to an army source directly involved.
Six months earlier, Mr Hastie had commanded four armoured fighting vehicles in Afghanistan. Hit by roadside bombs four times and attacked with rockets, he had become jumpy at loud noises, including slamming doors.
Even though Mr Roberts-Smith was one of 50 instructors at Bindoon, Mr Hastie felt insulted that his combat experience was being ignored by the corporal. Mr Roberts-Smith hadn’t, at that stage, become famous. Two months earlier he stormed a machine-gun position in the village of Tizak in Afghanistan, helping save his platoon, but was yet to be recognised for his bravery with the Victoria Cross.
At Bindoon, adding to the discomfort from a lack of sleep and limited food, Mr Hastie’s bleeding knuckles became infected and leaked pus.
“I had been in some very difficult situations and all of a sudden I was being treated like a, you know, a scumbag, basically,” he said later. “Putting your knuckles into the dirt where they bled was certainly not an easy option.”
The knuckle push-up story would be repeated throughout the years, cited by Mr Roberts-Smith’s allies as an example of Mr Hastie’s unreasonable resentment.
One SAS veteran who joined the regiment around the same time said push ups and other physical exercises were set in advance and instructors did not have the discretion to change them. Applicants were deliberately not given feedback to test their psychological resilience, he said, and were forced to strip naked in front of female instructors and undergo other humiliations.
MISSED THE TARGET
Mr Hastie was among 42 who passed the selection course. Only 26 were allowed to enter the next stage, an 18-month training program.
About a third of the trainees failed the training and were sent back to the regular army. They almost included Mr Hastie, who was unable to hit an A4-sized target at 15 metres with a pistol while wearing a gas mask four weeks into a 12-week close-quarter battle course.
The failure forced him to redo the course, which teaches soldiers to storm buildings and aircraft and rescue hostages. Because of the delay, unlike the rest of his intake, Mr Hastie missed out on being issued his sandy-coloured SAS beret by the late Duke of Edinburgh at a ceremony at Campbell Barracks, the SAS base in Perth, in October, 2011.
The regiment liked the son of a Presbyterian pastor and assigned him a platoon anyway. Known in the SAS as a troop, he commanded about 35 men. In 2012 he returned to Afghanistan, where he crossed paths with Mr Roberts-Smith again. Their brief encounter would have profound consequences for both men.
A HELLFIRE OVER YOUR HEAD
During his five years in the SAS, Captain Hastie never fired a gun in anger. But his first, brief trip to Afghanistan with the regiment exposed him to great violence.
In October, 2012, the captain was sent to Uruzgan province for about five days to learn how the SAS fought. By chance, he arrived just in time for a mission to kill or capture an insurgent in Syahchow, a Taliban hotspot in southern Afghanistan also known as Siah Chow.
There wasn’t enough room for Captain Hastie on the four Black Hawk helicopters that took the main SAS force to the village that morning. When he arrived on the helicopters’ second run, he said he saw Mr Roberts-Smith’s team interrogating 10 to 15 Afghan prisoners, who were lined up against a wall.
Even though he was an officer, the captain had no direct authority over the men. He was assigned to guard a small knoll.
(continued)
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d0bc64 No.24636332
>>24636329
3/6
Mr Hastie later told a court he heard someone say over the radio net “EKIA” - an enemy had been killed - but didn’t hear any shots, a not uncommon event in the war. Mr Roberts-Smith walked by and said, according to Mr Hastie: “Just a couple more dead c*nts.”
Federal prosecutors plan to accuse the corporal of ordering another soldier to execute a prisoner at Siah Chow, according to documents filed in the NSW Local Court.
Mr Roberts-Smith denies ordering any executions, and said he threw a grenade into a wooded grove at Siah Chow where he thought two insurgents might be hiding in preparation for an ambush.
The mission ended spectacularly. Another of the SAS teams, and the captain in charge, got into a firefight with insurgents. Mr Hastie had to take cover while a large Australian machine-gun fired over his head. Unable to kill the Talibs with guns, the Australians called in an American Apache helicopter, which ended the fight with a Hellfire missile, according to Mr Hastie.
The Australians found what Mr Hastie called “a massive cache” of weapons, including rocket-propelled grenades, which can bring down helicopters. “So it was clearly an insurgent stronghold,” he said in court.
The weapons were blown up, triggering a huge explosion. “Probably the biggest blast I’ve ever been part of,” Mr Hastie said. “Lots and rocks and dirt falling from the sky.”
He described his first experience of combat with the SAS as sensory overload. “One minute you’re having a coffee in Subiaco and then, next minute, you’ve got Hellfires being, yes, fired over your head,” he said.
Siah Chow was a turning point in the relationship between the two men.
In the weeks afterwards, Mr Hastie said he “had a gut feeling something wasn’t right” that he discussed with his platoon’s senior sergeant. There was “a consensus between me and the troop sergeant that something bad had happened, but there was no real evidence”, he said in court in 2022.
Military rules require personnel to report offences. Executing a prisoner is one of the gravest crimes in war. Mr Hastie spoke to his boss, a major, but never made a formal complaint within the army about the man he would later call a “war criminal”.
“I can accept that I didn’t indicate that Ben Roberts-Smith had done anything himself, because I couldn’t prove it,” he said in 2022. “You don’t always have to press the red button, as it were, and go straight to a reportable incident. You’ve got to exercise judgment. I made a judgment call and, like I said, as a troop commander, you have a sphere of sovereignty, and I decided to do the best I could within that.”
‘APEX OF POWER’
There may have been another reason Mr Hastie didn’t act on his suspicions. He seemed afraid of or intimidated by the corporal.
In 2012, over a meal at Camp Russell, Mr Hastie said Mr Roberts-Smith told him “officers just get in the way” and they should not directly participate in assaults.
Mr Hastie later concluded the comment was a sinister warning not to interfere. Asked in court why a captain would allow himself to be intimidated by a corporal, the third most-junior rank, Mr Hastie said he did not want to cause tension.
“Mr Roberts-Smith was at the apex of the SASR power structure at the time,” he said.
While Mr Roberts-Smith may have been trying to intimidate the captain, officers are expected to stay out of the fighting in most cases and concentrate on managing their forces.
In 2010 at the Battle of Tizak, for which the regiment was recognised with its first battle honours since Vietnam, the platoon’s captain based himself on a hill looking over the village and allowed his sergeants to organise the attack that led to the Victoria Cross being awarded to Mr Roberts-Smith.
(continued)
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d0bc64 No.24636334
>>24636332
4/6
PRAYING FOR GUIDANCE
Mr Hastie was not just unhappy with Mr Roberts-Smith. A committed Christian, he questioned whether the regiment had become a killing machine that celebrated “warrior culture”.
“Killing became a sacrament in itself, which is why I called it a pagan warrior ethos,” he said in court.
By sending the army to fight an insurgency into an almost lawless country, Australia forced its soldiers into “arbitrary judgments about who was good and who was bad”, he said.
Mr Hastie had grown up in a religious family. His father, Peter Hastie, started a church in 1980 in country Victoria and became a pastor at two private schools in Sydney, the Presbyterian Ladies College and Scots College, which his son attended, and led a protestant Bible school in Melbourne.
At school, Andrew Hastie embraced his father’s Christianity with a commitment some members of his platoon in the SAS would later find unusual for a soldier, according to one.
At key moments in his life, Mr Hastie would pray for guidance, a practice he continued into politics. At Easter this year, for example, he said he believed in the four gospels in the Bible’s New Testament, the basis of Christian beliefs about Jesus’s life. He described the crucifixion and resurrection “as the historical turning point of the world”.
In Afghanistan, a deeply conservative Muslim country, the captain and the corporal represented competing interpretations of Christianity. There was “something of culture war going on,” Mr Hastie said.
Born Catholic but not a church-goer, Mr Roberts-Smith had a large Jerusalem Cross tattoo on his chest. The symbol represents the four gospels, Matthew, Mark, Luke and John, and the crucifixion. It was displayed during the Crusades, a series of Christian military conquests into Muslim territories in the ninth to the eleventh centuries.
In contrast to the philosophical and intellectual Mr Hastie, Mr Roberts-Smith and his friends enjoyed drinking and dressing up for parties at a bar they created at Camp Russell called The Fat Ladies Arms.
COUNSELLING SESSIONS
Mr Hastie’s platoon arrived in Afghanistan in February, 2013, at the tail end of Australia’s combat role in the war. He became an informal counsellor to some of the soldiers who had led an anti-Roberts-Smith faction within the regiment.
Among them was Sgt Kenneth Barber, a pseudonym, who fought in the 2010 Battle of Tizak. A former fitness instructor and military history obsessive, Sgt Barber was so convinced his rival did not deserve the Victoria Cross that he asked the army to rescind it two years later, a step too far for even some of those who later accused Mr Roberts-Smith of murder.
Even Nine baulked at challenging the decoration in court, fearing it could split its own witnesses in the defamation lawsuit filed by Mr Roberts-Smith.
In long conversations in Mr Hastie’s office, the two men talked about God, evil and “cosmic justice”, according to Mr Hastie. “Don’t you worry,” Mr Hastie said he told Sgt Barber. “Time will take care of himself.”
His on-the-ground experience convinced the captain Afghanistan’s dysfunctional legal system contributed to insurgent deaths.
Suspected Talibs were released after three days unless there was evidence against them, which was often hard to obtain other than they were present near fighting. Taliban fighters did not wear uniforms, carry military identification or follow the Geneva Conventions, which require prisoners to disclose their rank.
Seeing potential insurgents quickly freed made Australian soldiers less motivated to take prisoners, Mr Hastie said he told the regiment’s commanding officer after he returned from the war.
“This system incentivises killing rather than capturing,” he said he told the senior officer.
(continued)
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d0bc64 No.24636338
>>24636334
5/6
THE INVESTIGATION BEGINS
With the war effectively over for the SAS, Mr Hastie began planning his post-military career. He applied for a scholarship to study a history PhD at Oxford University. His thesis proposal, which was rejected, was about the difficulty fighting the Taliban.
In 2015, the Liberal MP for Canning, Don Randall, suffered a heart attack and died. Mr Hastie, aged 32, replaced him.
It was only now, as a first-term politician, that he explicitly raised his concerns about unlawful killings to the army hierarchy, he acknowledged in court, and that was prompted by media attention, according to evidence he gave in court in 2022.
Because of his history in the SAS, reporters began asking him about rumours surrounding the Victoria Cross awardee, including Samantha Maiden of News Corp., who approached him at a popular Parliament House cafe called Aussies, he said.
The backbencher rang Maj-Gen. Jeff Sengelman, the head of the special operations forces, and said: “Jeff, you have an issue. There are gallery journalists asking questions.”
The general had heard the rumours and was already considering what to do. After amassing evidence, he formally notified his superiors there was a problem, triggering a formal investigation by the Inspector General of the Australian Defence Force.
At a cost of $7 million, and using high-pressure interview tactics, what became known as the Brereton Report eventually concluded 25 special forces soldiers executed 39 people in Afghanistan.
'UP THE CONGO'
While Paul Brereton, a NSW judge and Army reservist, investigated the SAS, journalist Chris Masters pursued the Roberts-Smith rumours. Masters flew to Perth seeking information from Mr Hastie, who picked up the freelancer from the city and drove both of them 70km to his office in the outer suburb of Mandurah.
It was the start of a collaboration that would include Masters’ collaborator, Nine reporter Nick McKenzie, and culminate in Mr Roberts-Smith’s arrest on April 7.
When McKenzie asked if a prisoner was executed at Siah Chow on Mr Roberts-Smith’s orders, Mr Hastie confirmed he was present. He told McKenzie that he considered Mr Roberts-Smith a real-life version of Colonel Walter Kurtz, a fictional character from the 1979 film Apocalypse Now who leaves the US Army during the Vietnam War to create his own cult at the end of a river.
“Some guys went up the Congo; the others didn’t,” he said he told McKenzie.
He confided in Masters that he had wanted to be a journalist too. “What you are doing is important work,” he said, according to notes taken by Masters.
The politician became so comfortable with the reporters he shared a dream that haunted him about participating in the killing of an Australian soldier with Mr Roberts-Smith.
“We had killed one of our own guys and we had covered it up and it is the deep truth that I carry, and I wake up fearful and my whole day is ruined,” he said in court.
'COCK OF THE YEAR'
In return for his confidential help, the journalists gave him advance notice about what would appear in some of their articles, including a widely read 2018 piece that accused Mr Roberts-Smith of kicking an Afghan man off a river embankment in 2012. The soldier was identified by a nom de plume, Leonidas.
Mr Roberts-Smith, who at the time was hunting for an Afghan government soldier who had killed three Australians, denied kicking the man or ordering his execution.
In 2019, Mr Hastie agreed to be interviewed for a 60 Minutes episode reported by McKenzie and co-produced by Masters that accused Mr Roberts-Smith of war crimes. Sgt Barber, his identity hidden, also appeared on the show.
A friend of Mr Hastie’s from the regiment was helping too. Peter Winnall, a major who led 1st Squadron to Afghanistan in 2010, had comforted Mr Hastie when he failed the shooting course.
The major felt corporals and sergeants like Mr Roberts-Smith had too much power. For trying to rein them in, he was punished after the squadron returned from Afghanistan with the semi-humorous “Cock of the Year” award. He quit the army a year later.
“He was shattered by it,” Mr Hastie said in court.
(continued)
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d0bc64 No.24636340
>>24636338
6/6
A text message shared with The Nightly indicates Mr Winnall introduced Masters to an ex-SAS soldier who went to high school with Mr Roberts-Smith.
The approach was made two months before the conclusion of a Federal Court hearing in a defamation lawsuit filed by Mr Roberts-Smith against Masters, McKenzie and their employer, Fairfax Media, which by then had been bought by Nine Entertainment Co. Nine was looking for witnesses to bolster its defence.
Last weekend Mr Winnall joked about one of the murder charges against the Victoria Cross awardee.
“I’d go watch except innocent bystanders likely to get kicked off a cliff!” he wrote on Instagram in response to a satirical post proposing a paintball fight between Mr Roberts-Smith and Mr Hastie at the SAS barracks in Perth to settle their feud.
Mr Winnall did not respond to several requests for comment. He published an article in The Australian on Tuesday complaining that soldiers and their families have “been put through hell by delay and leak”.
The soldier he contacted, who now works for a West Australian mining company, did not respond to an email seeking comment.
EXPENSES ON NINE
The accusations prompted Mr Roberts-Smith to sue the journalists and Nine for defamation. Some of Mr Hastie’s legal expenses were paid by Nine.
That wasn’t unusual in the case. The lawsuit was paid for by the man who hired Mr Roberts-Smith as a television station manager at the 7 Network, Kerry Stokes, who was then chairman of the parent company.
(The Nightly and Seven are both owned by Southern Cross Austereo, which is a competitor to Nine. Mr Stokes does not intend to fund Mr Roberts-Smith’s legal defence against the murder charges, a spokesman said.)
Nine is paying for lawyers to represent Mr Hastie in a separate defamation lawsuit in Western Australia and has offered to cover his legal costs if he loses. A Perth property developer has accused Mr Hastie or his staff of leaking a private recording to the WAtoday website, which is owned by Nine. Filed almost seven years ago, the case is due to be heard by a judge in July.
In the defamation case, Mr Roberts-Smith’s barrister, Arthur Moses SC, accused Mr Hastie of using his relationship with Nine to advance his political career.
“You didn’t have the courage to put your name to the allegation of a war crime, did you?” Mr Moses said. “Why didn’t you say to Mr McKenzie, ‘Yes. Sure. Print in the media that I, Mr Hastie MP, is saying that Mr Roberts-Smith VC is a war criminal?’”
Mr Hastie said the allegations were being investigated by the ADF inspector-general and it was not appropriate for him to intervene before Justice Brereton considered all the evidence.
“I believe in the rule of law and I thought it was an important part of the process,” Mr Hastie said. “For it to be undermined, attacked and diminished was bad for our country.”
Mr Roberts-Smith lost the lawsuit, which served as a trial run for his likely murder trial.
Federal prosecutors have not disclosed if they intend to ask Mr Hastie to give evidence against his former colleague. They have said they will seek the maximum penalty for Mr Roberts-Smith: five life sentences.
https://thenightly.com.au/australia/inside-andrew-hasties-campaign-against-ben-roberts-smith-c-22323769
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d0bc64 No.24636351
>>24610615
SALL GROVER: I will never be lectured on misogyny by Julia Gillard, and neither should you
Sall Grover - May 19, 2026
1/2
Next week, Julia Gillard will appear at the Hay Festival in Wales where she will be speaking on misogyny and sexism in politics – her pet subject. At the festival, Australia’s first female prime minister will dine out on her historic status, commanding her usual fee to lecture the world on what it means to be a woman in public life.
All the while, back home, Australian women and girls continue to clean up the mess her government created with the 2013 amendments to the Sex Discrimination Act. Under her leadership, and with Mark Dreyfus as attorney-general, the Labor government quietly removed the biological definitions of “man” and “woman” from the act.
Previously, the law explicitly defined a “man” as a member of the male sex and a “woman” as a member of the female sex. These were replaced with the vague, self-declared concept of “gender identity”. There was no referendum, minimal public debate, and little scrutiny.
It was sold as simple inclusion and progress. In reality, it laid the groundwork for the erosion of sex-based rights that we are living with today.
I am living those consequences right now. In 2020, I launched Giggle, a social networking app designed as a safe digital space for women. It was created for women to connect, laugh, support one another, and simply exist without the male gaze that permeates so much of online life. The app was built on biological reality: women are adult human females. We deserve spaces where that reality is respected, free from intimidation or intrusion.
Roxanne Tickle, a biological male who identifies as a woman, sought access. When I upheld Giggle’s women-only policy and excluded him, he sued under the Sex Discrimination Act. What followed was more than four years of gruelling litigation that has consumed my life, my start-up, my peace of mind, and women’s rights.
In 2024, the Federal Court initially found indirect discrimination. I appealed. On May 15, 2026, the Full Federal Court dismissed my appeal, allowed Tickle’s cross-appeal, found direct discrimination as well, and doubled the damages from $10,000 to $20,000.
The judges ruled that noticing a man looks like a man can itself be unlawful, because “looking like a man” is now treated as a protected aspect of gender identity.
They declared that sex is changeable under the act. The legal category of “woman” has effectively been made unisex. Women’s rights to single-sex spaces, forged through decades of advocacy, were rendered invisible.
This is not abstract legal theory. It has real, personal costs. The fight has prevented me from growing Giggle into the thriving platform I envisioned. It has drained my resources and energy. I face potentially crippling High Court costs as I continue the battle.
Complete strangers have felt entitled to label me a bigot, a TERF, and a hater. The stress has been physical: my hair has fallen out in patches during the worst periods, sleepless nights have become routine, and a constant weight sits on my chest as I wonder what kind of country my daughter will inherit, a country that can no longer clearly define what a woman is in law, where men who identify as women are afforded more rights and access than actual women.
(continued)
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d0bc64 No.24636352
>>24636351
2/2
When ideology erases reality, we all lose
I am far from alone. Across Australia, brave women are fighting similar battles against the overreach of gender ideology. Mothers are challenging the rushed medicalisation of distressed children, often driven by social contagion rather than careful, evidence-based care. Britain’s Cass Review highlighted profound weaknesses in the evidence base for puberty blockers and hasty transitions, yet Australia has been slow to apply those lessons. In schools, parents confront policies that allow social transitions behind their backs, undermining family authority and exposing children to irreversible paths without proper oversight.
Female athletes are defending fair sport. Biological males competing in women’s categories retain significant physical advantages in strength, speed, and bone density, advantages that no amount of hormones can fully erase. This is not about inclusion; it is about fairness and safety for girls and women who have fought for their own competitive arenas.
We stand up for the same fundamental reason: sex is real, binary, and immutable. It is the foundation of material reality and of women’s hard-won rights, from single-sex prisons and shelters to sports, changing rooms and apps. When we allow ideology to erase that reality, everyone loses, especially the most vulnerable women and girls.
Why I will not give up
Yet I will not yield. While the personal toll has been immense, the cost of silence is far higher. Our daughters deserve to grow up in a world that acknowledges their sex as real and offers them real protections. Every woman deserves the right to say no to men, no matter how they identify, without the state punishing her for it.
That is why I will take this case to the High Court. Not just for Giggle. Not just for myself. But for every woman exhausted by this ideological capture. For every girl who deserves boundaries and fairness.
For every mother fighting to protect her child from experimental medical interventions lacking robust evidence.
Politicians from across the spectrum are now acknowledging the problem, with calls to restore biological definitions and protect single-sex spaces. The tide is turning because biological reality cannot be legislated away.
As Julia Gillard steps onto the international stage this Monday to opine on misogyny and sexism, Australian women will keep cleaning up the disastrous legacy of her government’s 2013 changes.
Everyone knows, deep down, that a woman is an adult human female. No court ruling, no quiet legislative amendment slipped through parliament, and no amount of ideological pressure can rewrite that truth. This battle for women’s rights will not stop here.
I will never be lectured on misogyny by that woman, and neither should you.
Sall Grover is the founder and chief executive of Giggle and a women’s rights campaigner.
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/inquirer/i-will-never-be-lectured-on-misogyny-by-julia-gillard-and-neither-should-you/news-story/d107759b9095c16174ddc15f510a5ccc
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d0bc64 No.24640016
>>24610615
Protesters rally in London to back Sall Grover’s fight for women’s rights
JACQUELIN MAGNAY - 24 May 2026
More than 100 protesters supported Australian woman Sall Grover and called for a change to Australia’s sex discrimination laws in front of the Australian High Commission in London on Saturday.
The group was sending a clear message to Ms Grover to continue her fight for women, after a recent shock Federal court ruling in Australia allows biological men to have access to women’s spaces.
The Australian court decision says that gender identity supersedes biological sex when it comes to the sex discrimination act, prompting women’s rights movements to believe the Australian government is now prioritising the feelings of men who claim to be women over the reality of biological women. The decision has appalled female supporters in the UK.
The trailblazing round the world sailor Tracy Edwards told The Australian: “We learn what happening to women (in Australia), we support Sall and other women at the same time. Australian politicians appear to be waking up that maybe this law is not as well thought as they thought”
She called for Australian politicians “to make changes to the law that we saw in the Giggle versus Tickle case because it's a great visual of what happens when you don’t listen to women’’.
The protesters heard messages from Australian women including the Victorian Liberal politician Moira Deeming.
“Women cannot be erased, but we can be pissed off,’’ Ms Deeming said.
“Don’t say we didn’t warn you. I want to thank everyone for coming out today and standing with Aussie women and girls. You all stood with me from the start and gave me hope when I felt alone.’’
Various protesters held up signs and blow up kangaroos and sang a ditty to the tune of Waltzing Matilda. There was even a purple dinosaur, which has been an emblem of some groups after the British deputy prime minister David Lammy called pro-women activists “dinosaurs” wanting to “hoard rights”.
Over the weekend Ms Grover issued an open letter to prime minister Anthony Albanese saying “we have a problem … the full Federal court sided with the man who claims to be a woman. Yes, a male won the “what is a woman court case. Giggle v Tickle has turned Australia into an international laughing stock”
She added: “This decision is seismic, I means women cannot run women only businesses for women. It confirmed the at the ordinary meaning of sex has been twisted beyond recognition. It means men can be women in law.“
She said the Australian Human Rights Commission was captured by ideology and that the commission has weaponised the sex discrimination act against women, the very demographic it was enacted to protect.
Ms Grover said the human rights commission even argued in “that men who claim to be women need pregnancy protections’’.
In the UK, the interpretation by the court has been very different and the issue has been high profile, led by the author J.K. Rowling and top female athletes such as Ms Edwards and Olympic silver medallist Sharron Davis as well as a group of Scottish women, Trina Budge, Marion Calder and Susan Smith.
The Supreme Court in England ruled in April 2025 that women, under the sex discrimination act, applies to biology, and not the “feelings” or gender identity of people.
This means, under delayed legal guidance released last week by UK Equality and Human Rights Commission, that single-sex toilets and changing rooms in England, Wales and Scotland are to be used by people according to their biology. It also means transgender men and women must use public bathrooms according to their sex at birth or use gender neutral toilets.
However in Australia Ms Grover, who ran the women’s app Giggle, is now trying to get the laws changed.
She has been battling in the courts for five years after Roxy Tickle, a transwoman, complained of discrimination in being refused access to the app.
Ms Grover said the “real world” stakes aren’t inclusion, but the demise of women’s rights.
She said the silence from the Labour Party following the court decision “tells us everything.’’
She sent a message to Mr Albanese: “You boast about 50 per cent women in cabinet, good for you, you can accurately recognise what a woman is when it suits you. But the rest of us aren’t allowed to without fear of punishment. If you filled that Cabinet with 50 per cent trans women, would you still call it equality between men and women?’’
Metropolitan Police kept a close eye on the Australia House rally, especially as a trans-rights gathering was being held outside of Parliament House at the same time and they were keen to keep the two groups well apart.
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/world/protesters-rally-in-london-to-back-sall-grovers-fight-for-womens-rights/news-story/209a04ba95767cf6163388f37d134790
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d0bc64 No.24640021
>>24621717
>>24636062
ISIS bride will be stranded in Syria on Australian government’s orders
Michael Bachelard - May 24, 2026
1/2
One of the Australian women hoping to return from a detention camp in Syria will be blocked from coming home by the temporary exclusion order imposed on her by the Albanese government.
Representatives of the family had hoped the government would relent and allow the woman, who has a child, to return to Australia if Syria deported her – under the condition she would be placed under a terrorism control order or electronic surveillance once in Australia.
But legal experts, government sources and sources close to the Syrian government agree that, under the law, she will be blocked from travelling to Australia. The exclusion order would be flagged to the airline if she bought a ticket and the woman would be refused passage, sources said.
“In practice, a person with a [temporary exclusion order] will not be allowed onto a plane whose destination is Australia,” said a government source who declined to be named because he is not authorised to speak publicly.
This might happen at a hub such as Doha, or more likely in Damascus.
Under the order, the woman maintains her Australian citizenship so is not rendered stateless, but she is placed in limbo. It is unclear whether the single-entry passport the government has granted her could be used to travel anywhere else.
The situation poses a dilemma for the woman, whose child is not subject to the order. She can either stay in Syria with her child, who is also an Australian citizen, or send the child to Australia with the remaining six women and 13 children, who were the last of the Islamic State-linked family members to leave the al-Roj camp this week.
Four women and nine children who had been in the camp returned to Australia earlier this month, and three of the women were arrested. Two were charged with crimes against humanity relating to enslavement and using a slave, and one was charged with entering a terrorist zone.
The remaining seven women and 14 children left the camp late this week and arrived in Damascus. Camp director Haval Rashid confirmed the movement of the women, saying there were now no Australians left in al-Roj, where they have lived for the past seven years.
Family advocates say the mother under the temporary exclusion order (TEO) is unlikely to part from her child, so both would be trapped in Syria for up to two years – longer if the government issues a new exclusion order.
Asked if Australia would provide them consular assistance during that time, the government source said that since it had not offered assistance to the women and children in the camp, it would not offer help for someone in an airport in a “relatively safe part of the world”.
Another source who is close to the Syrian government but also not authorised to speak publicly agreed the woman would not be permitted to leave Damascus.
“We can handle her,” the source told this masthead. “I don’t think it’s going to be an issue for a single person – the issue is if there are any dependants. We’re going to seek advice about how to help them in Syria.”
(continued)
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d0bc64 No.24640023
>>24640021
2/2
As for the family advocates’ hope that the government might allow the woman entry to Australia subject to other conditions, such as a terrorism control order or electronic surveillance, the Australian government source said it would not negotiate on the issue.
“I’m not sure what leverage the families think they have,” he said.
Don Rothwell, an international law professor at ANU, said the woman was in “completely unknown legal territory” because this was the first time such an order would be tested.
“If you were a lawyer representing this individual, the best outcome would be for the [temporary exclusion order] to be lifted,” Rothwell said. “There is a legal avenue to challenge, but on the basis of the factors I’m aware of … unless you could identify some sort of administrative error on the part of the minister, or error or irregularity in the security advice the minister receives, the ability to challenge would be very limited.”
The lawyer for the women did not respond to queries about a challenge, or whether they would apply for a “return permit”, under which the minister can agree to a return. Government sources would not confirm whether a return permit had been sought.
The exclusion order was imposed by Home Affairs Minister Tony Burke in February during the political conflagration over an earlier attempt to return the so-called ISIS brides.
An exclusion order is placed on ASIO advice, and if the minister suspects it would help prevent a terrorist act, or training or support for terrorism. It can also be imposed if ASIO assesses the person to be “directly or indirectly a risk to security for reasons related to politically motivated violence”.
In February, Burke said the woman who is subject to the order was an immigrant to Australia who had been granted citizenship under John Howard’s prime ministership, and had gone to Syria while Tony Abbott was prime minister.
The government source said the woman could try returning to her birth country, but Burke said in February: “Given the country that she came from in those circumstances, I’m … pretty confident they wouldn’t recognise that citizenship.”
Save the Children chief executive Mat Tinkler said that “all innocent Australian children deserve a chance at safety home in Australia regardless of the actions their parents may have done. As we’ve seen from previous repatriations, there is no security risks that these women impose that can’t be handled by Australia’s robust systems.
“The TEO just kicks the can down the road, makes this woman someone else’s responsibility and doesn’t deal with Australia and fundamental obligations.
“Remember, two-thirds of the people we’re talking about are children, and when they finally arrive home this will be the first time many of the children have slept in a bed outside a tent in a detention camp. Let’s not get too preoccupied with only a discussion about the mothers.”
http://archive.today/goI1s
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d0bc64 No.24640031
>>24603494
Royal commission, parliament to grill AFP on counter-terror funding report
JAMES DOWLING - 24 May 2026
1/2
ASIO and the federal police will face intense scrutiny on two fronts over their handling of the Bondi massacre, with the Senate investigating severe counter-terror staff shortages and the royal commission focusing on the security failings that led to Australia’s worst terror attack.
Royal commissioner Virginia Bell in Sydney will hold three weeks worth of hearings from Monday on the Bondi massacre’s tragic prelude and questions outstanding from her interim report into the security services.
In Canberra, opposition home affairs spokesman Jonathon Duniam will interrogate Australian Federal Police officials at a Senate estimates hearing on Thursday over a report prepared more than year before the December 14 attack warning that officers were stretched to their limits.
The Australian first reported on the document and its contents a day after the terror massacre.
The AFP report, titled “CTSI (Counter-Terrorism and Special Investigations) Command Critical Staffing Levels — Impact Statement”, was co-written by three counter-terror commanders in May 2024.
A source who saw the report gave new details of its contents, saying “critical shortfalls”, “leadership gaps”, “operational risks” and “structural flaws” in the force’s counter-terror apparatuses were laid bare. Only one of five superintendent positions were substantively filled, the source said, and staffing levels were “critically low” with vacancies in the department floating at around 20 per cent, creating a “psychosocial hazard”.
ASIO raised the national terrorism threat level from “possible” to “probable” just three months later.
AFP commissioner Krissy Barrett in February told Senate estimates she had not seen the report and the AFP said it exposed only an “administrative error” that when found “was immediately rectified”.
Senator Duniam was not convinced. “The government and the relevant officials say that counter-terrorism is adequately resourced, but there appear to be very substantial discrepancies between their public and the frank concerns being raised by AFP sources about vacancies, workloads and capability,” he told The Australian.
“It seems either the warning was not escalated properly, or it was escalated and not acted upon adequately. Australians deserve clarity on which it was.”
As security chiefs come under the spotlight, Sky News’s Sharri Markson reported gunmen Naveed and Sajid Akram were able to fly freely to The Philippines and Uzbekistan – a common entry point to Afghanistan – despite ASIO demanding their travel be monitored. The report suggested AFP assistant commissioner Stephen Nutt and ASIO chief Mike Burgess would be among the first witnesses called before the commission on Monday.
Ms Bell last month revealed “the proportion of funding allocated to counter-terrorism significantly declined” across security agencies between 2020 and December 2025.
A senior AFP officer told The Australian in December suspected terror sympathisers and persons of interest far outnumbered the counter-terror officers monitoring them. “The ratio is something like, for every person – and they’re not all sworn police doing it – in those teams, they’re responsible for 20 or 30 people on the watch list,” the source said.
“It reached crisis point. We had brand-new recruits coming from the AFP college into CT because we couldn’t get the experienced staff we needed. That had never happened before.”
(continued)
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d0bc64 No.24640032
>>24640031
2/2
It is understood that of slightly more than 8000 members employed in the AFP, fewer than 2000 were available to do investigations, with an existing backlog of more than 10,000 jobs.
Mr Nutt told estimates in February the report was premised on an incorrect proposed budget figure which was amended.
“That was a report that was drafted in response to a proposed budget figure. It was realised after that response was drafted that the budget figure was actually incorrect – way too low,” Mr Nutt said.
“That was corrected subsequently. So the discussion never really had to be had because the actual budget figures were provided to the command. It was, for the lack of a better phrase, an initial response to a draft figure.”
The report was not escalated, Ms Barrett said in February, because of these “discrepancies and misunderstandings … There were some inaccuracies within that brief at the commander level, which meant it didn’t get beyond the assistant commissioner level.”
The AFP declined to answer further questions on the report and referred to past remarks. “This matter is before a royal commission and is subject to a criminal investigation,” a spokesperson said.
A source with knowledge of the AFP report said intelligence predicting rising terror incidents was not reflected in staff allocation. “Under-resourcing had reached critically dangerous levels, compromising operational effectiveness and staff welfare,” they said.
“Some CT operations lacked even a sergeant to lead teams.
“It would appear that the AFP senior executive are at best obfuscating and at worst lying about the critical contents of the report.
“The AFP (refers) to having a ‘flexible, mobile, deployable workforce’, but this is contrary to the advice of senior CT command members advising the AFP senior executive of the impact this was having on the workforce. It is also anathema to best practice in critical capability areas that require a high degree of expertise.”
Senator Duniam called on the royal commission to compel the document’s release. “The commission must be able to test whether warnings about counter-terrorism resourcing were properly escalated and acted upon,” he told The Australian.
“If warnings were raised and not acted upon, that must be conceded and confronted. Counter-terrorism is not an area (where) governments can tolerate complacency, evasion and buck-passing.”
The interim report did not publicly identify any specific intelligence or law-enforcement failings linked to the attack, but an entire chapter of the report remains confidential.
“The work of the royal commission has been advanced by hearing from Jewish Australians and others about their experiences of antisemitism,” Ms Bell said on Thursday.
“Our focus now turns to the matters explored in the interim report, including security arrangements for the Chanukah by the Sea event and resourcing for counter-terrorism.”
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation/royal-commission-parliament-to-grill-afp-on-counterterror-funding-report/news-story/cc6004db5989743f17a85df8537a399a
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d0bc64 No.24643178
>>24603494
>>24629136
>>24636038
>>24636052
‘I’m enraged’: Family demands answers from Israel, meeting with PM as activists arrive home
Roy Ward - May 24, 2026
1/2
A Melbourne woman has touched down in Australia, alleging she and fellow detainees were mistreated by Israeli authorities after their Gaza-bound flotilla was intercepted.
Gemma O’Toole was the first of 11 Australians released by Israel to arrive home on Sunday night. She was greeted by her parents and more than 100 supporters at Melbourne Airport.
Amid long hugs, tears, and chants of support, O’Toole – flanked by her parents, Dr Patrick Keyzer and Dr Suzie O’Toole – personally thanked all the people who came to welcome her home, vowing that this would not be the end of the matter.
O’Toole alleged that she and about 480 activists were physically, mentally and, in some cases, sexually abused after they were intercepted by the IDF on May 18 while sailing with the Global Sumud Flotilla towards Gaza intending to deliver aid.
The treatment of the detained activists was thrown into the international spotlight last Thursday when Israel’s National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir published a video of him taunting groups of detainees who were zip-tied and forced to kneel on the ground.
The videos received widespread international condemnation. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said the actions were “not in line with Israel’s values and norms”, but the flotilla’s mission amounted to unnecessary provocation.
On Sunday, O’Toole and her family demanded an audience with Prime Minister Anthony Albanese and called for more action against Israel following her experiences in Israeli custody.
“It was definitely the weirdest week of my life and definitely the worst week of my life,” O’Toole said.
“I haven’t seen much of the media reporting as I haven’t had a phone for a long time but I gather there is a lot of attention on the Ben-Gvir video which is so insane to me.
“What you saw in that video is an infinitesimal amount of what we actually went through.
“Then to think that is what they do to predominantly white people when they are being, relatively, held to account.”
In a video posted to Free Gaza Australia’s Instagram account, O’Toole said she was strip-searched multiple times and repeatedly “pushed in the chest” by male guards.
“Me personally, I was strip-searched, repeatedly pushed in the chest with a man grabbing my boobs, asking me if I was a girl or a boy,” O’Toole said in the video.
She added that they were unable to sleep as guards would wake them every 30 minutes to be moved rooms and recounted.
(continued)
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d0bc64 No.24643179
>>24643178
2/2
Israel’s Australian ambassador Hillel Newman told ABC’s 7.30 program last week no one was hurt during the interception of the activists.
“No one was hurt, the interception was done very smoothly,” Newman said. He “refuted completely” any allegations of sexual humiliation, said claims of “violence is not true” and that “many accusations thrown out there are not true”.
But when told of that comment, O’Toole said there were about 80 activists in hospital in Turkey, and she had visited five of them before she flew home. The group included people with broken vertebrae, broken legs and a fractured sternum and collapsed lung.
“Everyone is so deeply traumatised,” O’Toole said.
Newman, who is three months into his posting, was hauled before the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade on Thursday afternoon on Foreign Minister Penny Wong’s orders.
The government aimed to “reinforce” its displeasure over a video posted by Ben-Gvir.
“We condemn his actions and the degrading actions of Israeli authorities towards those detained,” Wong said in a statement on Thursday, calling the video “shocking and unacceptable”.
“Australia’s ambassador to Israel has made representations to Israel, reiterating our call for the release of the detained Australians and for Israel to ensure no ill-treatment of any detainees and to act in line with international obligations. I also directed DFAT to call in Israel’s ambassador to Australia to reinforce this message.”
The Australian activists onboard the flotilla were Juliet and Isla Lamont, Zack Schofield, Surya McEwen, Dr Bianca Webb-Pullman, Anny Mokotow, Neve Barwick O’Connor, Sam Woripa Watson, Violet Coco, Helen O’Sullivan and O’Toole.
O’Toole’s parents called for serious action from the Australian government against Israel, and they want an audience with the prime minister to make their case.
“If that is what they are prepared to do to Australians, on camera, imagine what they are doing to Palestinians who are locked up for years and years and years,” Keyzer said.
“I’m really angry. We want an audience with the prime minister. This doesn’t stop here.”
Suzie O’Toole said she was incredibly proud of her daughter and enraged at the treatment of the activists.
“I’m enraged, exhausted but absolutely furious that my daughter and all those other brave activists were kidnapped by Israel, held hostage, bashed and sleep-deprived all because they got on boats to take aid to starving people,” she said.
“They sailed on those boats because governments around the world, including Australia, haven’t pushed back against Israel in their relentless killing and ethnic cleansing of the Palestinians.
“She is clearly traumatised, we really need to get her home and start putting the pieces back together.”
https://www.theage.com.au/world/middle-east/i-m-enraged-family-demands-answers-from-israel-meeting-with-pm-as-activists-arrive-home-20260524-p6005f.html
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d0bc64 No.24643181
>>24443520 (pb)
>>24447126 (pb)
>>24490964 (pb)
Child sex allegations against Porepunkah gunman Dezi Freeman aired in coronial inquest
Ashlee Aldridge - 25 May 2026
1/2
WARNING: This story contains information that may be distressing to some readers.
The Victorian Coroner's Court has heard Dezi Freeman made "appalling remarks" as he stood over the bodies of two police officers killed while executing a search warrant over the alleged sexual assault of a child.
Fresh details about the killings of Senior Constable Vadim de Waart-Hottart, 34, and Detective Leading Senior Constable Neal Thompson, 59, in August 2025 at a property in Victoria's High Country were detailed in a Coroner's Court directions hearing on Monday morning.
A third officer was seriously injured in the incident after being shot in the leg.
Two separate directions hearings are being heard in the Coroners Court of Victoria before State Coroner Judge Liberty Sanger, the first of which will examine the deaths of the police officers.
Counsel assisting, Lindsay Spence, told the court police had executed the warrant after receiving disclosure of an alleged sexual assault involving a child under the age of 16, as well as an attempt to involve a child in the production of child abuse material.
Mr Spence told the court he would not repeat Freeman's alleged remarks out of respect for the families of the officers.
"The purpose of the search warrant was for the locating and seizure of electronic devices that were to be interrogated for the potential presence of child abuse material," he told the court.
"It was also intended that the person of interest was to be arrested and subsequently interviewed."
Family of the officers, including the partner and sisters of Detective Leading Senior Constable Thompson, attended the hearing, while Senior Constable de Waart Hottart's parents joined online.
More details of Porepunkah shooting emerge
The court heard police attempted to negotiate with Freeman for about 34 minutes after he refused repeated requests to leave the bus.
When he was told police were investigating the alleged sexual assault of a child, he responded "oh for f*ck sake, what bullsh*t".
After several attempts to get inside the bus, including one officer climbing on the roof to get entry, Detective Leading Senior Constable Thompson was able to open a window on the bus door and gain entry, the court was told.
He was shot in the face and neck after lifting himself through the window into the bus.
The court heard Senior Constable de Waart-Hottart was then shot in the head as officers tried to retreat from the annex attached to the bus.
The remaining officers took cover behind nearby vehicles, sheds and a shipping container as the shooting continued.
Mr Spence told the court that police body-worn camera footage captured Freeman repeatedly yelling "I had no choice, I had no choice".
He told the court that after the shooting, Freeman exited the bus with a shotgun before approaching Senior Constable Vadim de Waart-Hottart's body and removing his firearm and a spare magazine from its holster, before firing at officers sheltering near a white van.
One officer suffered cuts from shattered glass, while another narrowly avoided being hit after Freeman allegedly fired towards a shed where police had taken cover.
The hearing was told investigators have not recovered the shotgun allegedly used in the attack and do not know how Freeman obtained it.
"A police member was heard to call out 'Can you hear us Thommo?' with the offender replying 'F*cking scum. Die in hell … die in f*cking hell'," Mr Spence told the court.
Mr Spence said Freeman then used the stolen police firearm to shoot Thompson a second time.
"During this time the offender has stood over both bodies and said various things which, out of respect for the families, I will not repeat," Mr Spence said.
The court was also told Freeman said during the confrontation that the search warrant was "illegal" and he did not recognise police authority.
(continued)
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d0bc64 No.24643182
>>24643181
2/2
First court hearing
In a separate hearing this afternoon, the coroner will consider matters relating to their killer, Freeman.
It is expected the dates and the scope of the inquests will be set and the witnesses to be called to give evidence will be decided.
Freeman led police on one of the nation's largest manhunts after he killed the officers, who were among a team of police serving a warrant at his home at Porepunkah, 310 kilometres north-west of Melbourne.
The seven-month search for the 56-year-old ended when he died in a hail of police bullets on a remote property in Thologolong, near Walwa on the Victoria-NSW border on March 30.
The coroner will examine the three deaths in detail to establish who died, how they died and what could be done to prevent future deaths, Queensland University of Technology forensic criminologist Claire Ferguson has said.
"They'll have a full reconstruction of what actually occurred, and that might be establishing people's exact positioning in the scenes and forensic evidence," Dr Ferguson told AAP.
Speculation has been rife over how Freeman came to be in Thologolong, about 150km from Porepunkah, where he fatally shot the officers. That could also form part of the investigation.
Footage showed Freeman wrapped in a blanket when he emerged from the shipping container, which appeared to be a makeshift campsite, before pulling a gun from underneath and pointing it at police.
It is not known if he had fired the gun before multiple officers shot him dead, but Police Commissioner Mike Bush has maintained the shooting was justified.
Whether that video will be shown to the public will depend on the coroner weighing up the benefits of transparency and accountability and the probative value of people seeing police shoot someone, Bond University criminologist Terry Goldsworthy said.
Investigators had been exploring the possibility Freeman received help from others in evading police for 216 days, with Mr Bush saying it would have been very difficult for him to get to where he was without assistance.
A full coronial inquest is tentatively set for March next year.
https://www.abc.net.au/news/2026-05-25/porepunkah-police-shootings-inquest-dezi-freeman/106705782
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d0bc64 No.24643186
YouTube embed. Click thumbnail to play.
>>24603494
>>24640031
Synagogue killings sparked warning before Bondi attack
Duncan Murray - May 25, 2026
Australia's spy boss identified Jewish holy events as attractive targets for terrorists months before the Bondi Beach massacre.
But a royal commission has been told there was no evidence any intelligence agency specifically suspected a terror attack would take place before 15 people were killed in the anti-Semitic attack on December 14.
On Monday, the inquiry began looking at potential failures of security agencies to stop the mass shooting. It heard that in the first 29 seconds of the attack beginning, 11 people were shot.
After two people were killed by an assailant at a synagogue in Manchester in October 2025, ASIO circulated a threat assessment paper entitled: "Manchester Synagogue terrorist attack highlights enduring threat to Jewish interests."
The paper noted Jewish holy days and other significant dates were attractive targets for extremists, including Yom Kippur, the two-year anniversary of Hamas' October 7 attack, and Hanukkah.
Yet the spy agency's summer holiday threat assessment published in December did not specifically address warnings about terrorism to Jewish celebrations.
ASIO director-general Mike Burgess conceded in a written statement to the commission he should have noted the spy agency's general concern about terrorism threats and anti-Semitic conduct.
The December assessment should have been read in the context of Australia's terrorism threat level being at probable, meaning there was a greater than 50 per cent chance of an attack in the next 12 months, he said.
"We have very effective working relationships with the police services across joint counter-terrorism teams, so if they required further amplification to help them understand or even question our assessments, that was available to them," Mr Burgess told the inquiry.
The October assessment after the Manchester attack noted ASIO's greatest concern was lone actors using simple tactics and readily-acquired weapons.
Mr Burgess said it was extremely hard to detect such attacks if people were not discussing plans with a broader circle, including at prayer groups.
"We aren't all-seeing or all-knowing and we don't aspire to be," he said.
The spy boss said it was clear Jewish Australians were subject to more threats because rising anti-Semitism had "given more permission for violence".
He denied ASIO was under-resourced, despite less funding being directed to counter-terrorism between 2020 and 2025.
Before witnesses were called, counsel assisting the royal commission Richard Lancaster said the evidence was expected to show the massacre was a "surprise attack".
"There is no evidence any intelligence agency or law enforcement agency had any actual knowledge or specific information to suggest there might be an armed attack on the Hanukkah celebration," he told the inquiry.
Among the issues under scrutiny will be security arrangements for the Chanukah by the Sea event targeted by two gunmen, and what counter-terrorism agencies and police knew about the shooters.
Mr Lancaster said the Hanukkah community events were viewed by NSW Police as tier one security risks, compared with other Jewish celebrations held in September and October 2025 which were tier three, the highest threat.
Tier three events prompt counter-terrorism officers to manage policing of events, while tier one events are run by local officers.
In the lead-up to the attack, NSW Police has been warned a heightened atmosphere of anti-Semitism made a terror attack on the community likely, an interim report by the commission revealed in April.
Police planned to provide a high-visibility presence at the event, but ultimately only four officers and one area commander attended the event at various times.
Among 14 recommendations in the interim report was the need for tighter security arrangements at Jewish community gatherings.
Other endorsements included implementing nationally consistent firearm laws and a gun buyback scheme.
The report recommended considering making the role of commonwealth counter-terrorism co-ordinator full-time and clarifying the role of the Australia-New Zealand counter-terrorism committee.
The report also made five recommendations that were redacted from the publicly released version for national security reasons.
https://www.9news.com.au/national/police-intelligence-in-spotlight-bondi-terror-attack-royal-commission-antisemitism/bbd6b768-7157-46f2-9d8f-55a7e2277159
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_6RiSWYRoS8
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3cb6c0 No.24648021
Quad Nations Launch Fiji Port Plan, Critical Minerals Pact Amid China Tensions
Reuters May 26, 2026
NEW DELHI, May 26 (Reuters) – The foreign ministers of Australia, India, Japan and the U.S. agreed to jointly build a port in Fiji and signed pacts covering critical minerals and energy security, as they sought to inject fresh energy into their grouping known as the Quad.
The brief meeting between the countries’ top diplomats – Australia’s Penny Wong, India’s S. Jaishankar, Japan’s Toshimitsu Motegi and U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio – was the third such gathering of the Quad since September 2024.
The group unveiled its first joint infrastructure project, a port in Fiji.
“We are going to be partnering on issues of port infrastructure, in particular in response to insufficient port capacity in the Pacific Islands, we are announcing plans to work with Fiji,” Rubio said.
The four-nation group had lost some momentum last year after failing to hold a leaders’ summit, amid tensions between U.S. President Donald Trump and Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi over Washington’s tariffs and other matters.
“We are beginning to show real achievements and real accomplishments,” Rubio said. “We are deeply committed to this partnership. It is a linchpin and a cornerstone of our global strategy as a nation in the United States.”
He said the group agreed to launch an initiative on Indo-Pacific Energy Security and a critical minerals framework.
ABSENCE OF LEADERS’ SUMMIT CREATES DOUBTS
The minerals framework will guide how to leverage economic policy tools and coordinate investment to strengthen critical minerals supply chains – including in mining and processing – and in critical minerals recycling, Rubio said.
The initiative could be significant for Japan after China halted shipments of some minerals used in aerospace, defense and semiconductor industries following a diplomatic dispute.
New Delhi has pressed for a Trump visit to India, a trip that would probably be tied to a Quad summit. Analysts have questioned whether a lack of leader-level engagement has downgraded the Quad’s importance.
The foreign ministers did not comment on the possibility of a summit this year, but over the weekend, Rubio said that diplomats would work toward a meeting later this year.
“The absence of a leaders’ summit has raised some doubts, but that does not necessarily indicate declining importance,” said Premesha Saha, a senior policy fellow at the Asia Society Australia in Melbourne.
“If the Quad can keep delivering at the ministerial and working levels, it can remain relevant even without regular leaders-level signaling.”
The Quad countries share concerns about China’s growing power and Rubio has stressed the importance of maintaining a “free and open Indo-Pacific.”
QUAD SHOULDN’T TARGET THIRD PARTY, CHINA SAYS
A joint statement from the four countries said they remained “seriously concerned about the situation in the East China Sea and the South China Sea” as well as the “militarisation of disputed features” in the South China Sea.
They also condemned attacks on commercial shipping vessels in the Middle East and said they were opposed to the imposition of tolls, stressing on safety and uninterrupted flow of global commerce through the Strait of Hormuz and the Red Sea.
China claims almost the entire South China Sea and has built military facilities on disputed features. Several Southeast Asian countries also claim parts of the sea. China and Japan have a separate dispute over territory in the East China Sea.
Beijing has criticized the Quad as a Cold War-style grouping aimed at containing its development.
On Tuesday, it said cooperation between countries should contribute to regional peace, stability and prosperity, and should not target any third party.
“We also do not support the formation of exclusive cliques or bloc confrontation. No cooperation should undermine mutual trust and cooperation among regional countries,” China’s foreign ministry spokesperson, Mao Ning, told a daily press conference.
India, too, has territorial disputes with China, although Modi had signaled a willingness to improve ties with Beijing amid his tensions with Trump.
https://gcaptain.com/quad-nations-launch-fiji-port-plan-critical-minerals-pact-amid-china-tensions/
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d0bc64 No.24648147
YouTube embed. Click thumbnail to play.
>>24643186
ASIO's 2024 review of past terror cases didn't extend to prior flag on Bondi attackers
Tom Lowrey and Sean Rubinsztein-Dunlop - 25 May 2026
1/3
The head of Australia's domestic intelligence agency has revealed that ASIO reviewed past terrorism investigations after raising the threat level in 2024, but a resourcing decision meant it did not extend to a re-examination of the men soon to be the Bondi gunmen.
Called as the first witness in the latest phase of hearings at the royal commission investigating the massacre, ASIO director-general Mike Burgess also defended a significant decline in the share of funding devoted to counterterrorism.
Mr Burgess told the royal commission the raising of the terrorism threat level in August 2024 to "probable" was due to a deteriorating security environment in the wake of the October 7, 2023, attacks on Israel.
It sparked a decision to review the past 12 months of investigations into terrorism suspects.
ASIO's decision to limit the review of its counterterrorism caseload to just the past year meant the agency did not re-examine Bondi gunmen Naveed and Sajid Akram, who the agency had investigated five years earlier in 2019.
That investigation into the Akrams' links to an Islamic State (IS) cell concluded the father and son did not pose a terrorism threat or support IS.
It is an assessment that has since been questioned by the commission's former special adviser, ex-ASIO boss Dennis Richardson.
Today's revelation raises the possibility that ASIO could have learned that the Akrams had travelled around 2022 to Uzbekistan.
Uzbekistan is a gateway to Afghanistan and an active area for the influential Islamic State Khorasan Province branch.
ASIO could have also learned that Sajid Akram had obtained a firearms licence from NSW Police and was legally acquiring guns.
Counsel assisting the commission, Richard Lancaster SC, asked Mr Burgess why the review of previous terrorism suspects was limited to 12 months.
Mr Burgess said that was a resourcing decision, despite his insistence that ASIO's counterterrorism resourcing was adequate.
"That's a judgement made by our organisation in terms of where we've got our resources, what we need to do at that point in time," he said.
"We've got our immediate caseload that we have underfoot that needs resources applied.
"We made a judgement to go back 12 months just to satisfy ourselves those individuals and their circumstances haven't changed, and to make sure our assessment is still valid."
ASIO decided to limit the caseload under review despite warnings in the National Counter-Terrorism Plan that terrorism suspects from years earlier could pose a threat.
The commission did not draw attention to the fact in today's hearing.
The plan, which guides the policies and practices of ASIO and other agencies, says:
"Experience in Australia and overseas has shown the potential for … former subjects of counterterrorism investigations (known entities) to re-engage in violent extremist activity, including planning for or undertaking terrorist attacks.
"Some have undertaken attacks or attack planning years after a point-in-time assessment."
Mr Burgess told the hearing ASIO also reviewed the cases of young people involved in deradicalisation programs dating back to 2023 as a result of the raising of the threat level.
(continued)
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d0bc64 No.24648153
>>24648147
2/3
Burgess says no serious matters 'uninvestigated'
The ABC revealed last week that ASIO had reduced counterterrorism resourcing to its lowest funding share this century before the Bondi attack.
Mr Burgess told the hearing today that while resourcing was "stretched" it was sufficient and no serious leads were left uninvestigated in the years before the Bondi attack.
He was questioned extensively on ASIO's priorities in the years leading up to December 2025, particularly decisions in the early 2020s to shift resources towards escalating espionage and foreign interference threats and away from counterterrorism.
ASIO had reduced the terrorism threat level in 2022 but increased it back to "probable", meaning an attack was assessed as more than 50 per cent likely.
Mr Burgess said while the terrorism risk grew, threats from foreign states were not diminishing and the agency was left managing both challenges at once.
"It certainly stretches us, and stretched us at the time," he said.
"But we have a very effective identification and prioritisation process by which we're looking at what we have.
"I'm confident as director-general that even during that time, when my officers were working really hard, we were not leaving serious matters untreated or uninvestigated.
"That's the matters [we had] before us, of course. We are not all-seeing and all-knowing."
Burgess acknowledges flaws in holiday threat assessment
Mr Burgess also acknowledged that a holiday season threat assessment — issued to police and government agencies less than two weeks before the Bondi attack — did not specifically address the terrorism threat to Hanukkah, as revealed by the ABC on Saturday.
He said that with the benefit of hindsight the document could have included ASIO's concerns about antisemitic terrorism.
Police relied on the holiday season threat assessment to plan for events in December and January.
NSW Police only assigned four officers to periodically patrol the Chanukah by the Sea event where the Akrams killed 15 people.
ASIO had issued an earlier threat assessment that warned of possible attacks against Jewish Australians in October 2025 on the day after a fatal IS-inspired attack on a synagogue in Manchester on the holy day of Yom Kippur.
That threat assessment warned of "the enduring threat to Jewish interests … in Australia", particularly at crowded places and on holy days "leading up to Hanukkah".
Mr Burgess told the commission that police should not read ASIO threat assessments, released at various times through the year, in isolation.
He warned that Australia's terrorism threat level was continuing to escalate and was now at "the upper level of probable", with a high risk extremists could "go to violence with little or no warning".
"We're flagging the environment is a lot hotter, and that concerns me and my agency," he said.
Today's hearings avoided specific questions around ASIO's intelligence on the Bondi gunmen.
Mr Burgess will return to a closed session during the current three-week block of hearings, which are focused on intelligence and security decisions in the lead-up to the attack.
Most of the next three weeks of hearings will be closed because they deal with information deemed classified or potentially prejudicial to the surviving gunman's criminal case.
(continued)
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d0bc64 No.24648161
>>24648153
3/3
Jewish community 'uneasy' about limited policing presence at Bondi event
The commission also heard NSW Police did no risk assessment of the Chanukah by the Sea event and rejected requests from a Jewish security group for a permanent police presence.
The chief operating officer of the Community Security Group (CSG) recounted a phone call with an inspector from Eastern Suburbs Police Area Command about the group's request for police to be stationed there throughout the event.
"[I said that] given the threat environment our community was facing, the fact that it was an open-air event, the fact that CSG could not be armed in that environment … and given the number of people expected to attend the event, we requested a static presence," he said.
The CSG witness, whose identity is protected by the commission, was asked how the police inspector replied.
"His response, to my recollection, was that they do not believe a static presence is required based on a risk assessment they would have undertaken internally," he said.
"I said there would be a lot of unease from the community not having a static police presence on the ground."
The commission heard of a remarkable surge in antisemitic hate crime incidents in the wake of the October 7, 2023, terror attack in Israel.
Hate crime incidents recorded by NSW Police leapt from 40 in 2020 to 445 in 2024, and 841 in 2025.
Despite the surge in antisemitism, NSW Police Counterterrorism Commander Leanne McCusker told the commission no threat assessment was prepared ahead of the Hanukkah event.
She was questioned on a decision by NSW Police not to carry out the assessment despite one being completed for the Jewish High Holy Days, a sacred period including Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur.
Events during the High Holy Days were classed as tier three while assessing for risks and resources, while Hanukkah was treated as tier one and handled by local police rather than specialist squads, including the counterterrorism command.
Assistant Commissioner McCusker told the commission that with hindsight that could change in future.
"I see no reason why a threat assessment could not be completed for that [Hanukkah] event," she said.
Ten people killed in 29 seconds
At the start of today's hearings Mr Lancaster gave a timeline of the mass shooting, telling the commission 11 people were shot, 10 of them fatally, within the first 29 seconds.
He said three police officers received gunshot wounds.
There were 11 officers on scene within five minutes.
Gunman Sajid Akram was shot dead, while Naveed Akram was shot and apprehended about 7 minutes and 41 seconds after the shooting began.
Mr Lancaster said there was no evidence that any intelligence or policing agency had any specific information prior to the shooting about the planning of an armed attack.
"In that sense it was a surprise attack," he said.
Former AFP counterterrorism commander Stephen Nutt also gave evidence and, like Mr Burgess and Assistant Commissioner McCusker, will return for closed hearings.
https://www.abc.net.au/news/2026-05-25/asio-terror-cases-review-did-not-include-flagged-bondi-attackers/106719606
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aGWzO14ZeCI
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d0bc64 No.24648185
>>24643186
>>24648147
ASIO funding ‘stretched’ before Bondi, but spymaster Mike Burgess defends budget
JAMES DOWLING and BEN PACKHAM - May 25, 2026
1/2
Spymaster Mike Burgess says his counter-terror teams were stretched but not under-resourced ahead of the Bondi massacre, and if he’d asked for more money he would have had to find savings elsewhere in his budget.
The ASIO boss also revealed to the Antisemitism and Social Cohesion Royal Commission on Monday that the terrorist threat was at the “upper end” of its current “probable” designation, and Iran was believed to have carried out more than the two attacks on Australia’s Jewish community already attributed to the regime.
The second hearing block, set to run for three weeks from Monday, will focus on matters of national security, the events preceding the December 14 Bondi massacre, and questions outstanding from the royal commission’s interim report last month.
That report said funding for counter-terrorism had significantly declined over five years relative to an overall increase in the national intelligence community’s budget, which Mr Burgess agreed with but he said it did not reflect ASIO or its work.
“It’s not a one-for-one representation of what my organisation is doing in identifying and understanding its threats, including counter-terrorism,” he said.
“I still think our resourcing was sufficient for the problems we face. We’re operating in a budget environment where the government rules are very clear. If you ask for something … you have to offer an offset. So I might have got a plus up, but I would have had to take it from somewhere else.”
His agency had made a “pivot” to countering espionage and foreign interference before the October 7, 2023, Hamas attacks, but when terror threats began to escalate, those other priorities “had not let up”.
“It certainly stretches us and stretched us at the time,” Mr Burgess said. “(But) we were not actually leaving serious matters untreated or uninvestigated. I stress, we are not all-seeing and all-knowing.”
ASIO had reduced the terror threat level from “probable” to “possible” in November 2022 after the fall of the ISIS caliphate, where it remained for more than a year. “So there was a reduction in effort required,” Mr Burgess said.
“At the same time, every rock we lifted up, we found espionage or foreign interference that needed to be investigated, and so resources were moved over there.”
The threat level returned to “probable” in August 2024, and has continued to climb to “the upper end of probable”.
Mr Burgess said the terror risk could not be escalated from “probable” to “expected” unless ASIO found evidence of a specific terror plot.
“In the absence of not having that, it won’t go to ‘expected’, but we’re flagging the environment is a lot hotter than it has been in the past when we first raised the threat level, and that concerns me and my agency,” Mr Burgess said.
“We have a concerning trajectory. There is more permission for violence, and an environment where people can go to violence with little or no warning.”
Last August, Mr Burgess declared the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps had masterminded firebombing attacks on the Jewish kosher deli Lewis’ Continental Kitchen and Melbourne’s Adass Synagogue. He told the commission he suspected the Iranian government had masterminded more attacks – but he “can’t quite get there” proving it.
“We figured out that in those two cases, and we do believe there are more, we just can’t quite get there in terms of our level of assessment,” he said.
“There’s a number of activities we have under way to investigate matters … that would include any other potential actions under way from the state of Iran.”
(continued)
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d0bc64 No.24648190
>>24648185
2/2
In closed hearings Mr Burgess will be questioned on how ASIO handles online radicalisation.
Senior counsel assisting the commission, Richard Lancaster, said the interim report had made conclusions about counter-terror resourcing at the AFP and NSW Police Force, meaning it would not be addressed “in great detail” at the hearings.
It comes after The Australian reported the Australian Federal Police would be grilled at Senate estimates on a report, prepared more than year before the December 14 attack, warning that officers were stretched to the limit.
AFP counter-terror commander Stephen Nutt told the commission his agency did not lower its resourcing for counter-terrorism operations when the threat level fell in 2022, nor when it rose again in 2024.
“Organisationally there were not major changes there,” he said.
Mr Lancaster said the Bondi massacre was a “surprise attack”, with no agency having prior knowledge of the ISIS-inspired plot. But the commission detailed scores of general and specific warnings available to NSW police and other security agencies about the risks of lone wolf terror attacks and threats to the Chanukah by the Sea event.
Threat assessments given by Jewish-run Community Security Group to NSW police said Hanukkah events could be targeted by “lone actor attacks inspired by global jihadist propaganda”.
“A terrorist attack against the NSW Jewish community is likely, and there is a high level of antisemitic vilification,” one email read.
Another CSG official recalled police telling him three or four days before the attack that the Hanukkah event did not need a static police presence but he was challenged on his memory of the conversation.
A NSW police “threat assessment for crowded places” had warned since August 2024 that terrorists would likely target religious celebrations and involve “a lone actor or small group using rudimentary tactics”.
NSW police’s counter-terror team prepared no threat assessment for the event and there was no static police presence at the Chanukah by the Sea event.
CSG stationed 12 unarmed personnel at the gathering and four police officers were in the area when the shooting began.
Mr Burgess confirmed that a December 2025 threat assessment from ASIO warned of the prospect of attacks in crowded places, at “violent protests” and “religious events”, but it did not specifically refer to threats to the Jewish community.
On Tuesday, NSW police Assistant Commissioner Peter McKenna will outline why police deemed the Chanukah by the Sea celebration a “tier one” community event – essentially a low risk event that did not require consultation with major event or counter-terror authorities
Mr Lancaster said police would be asked if “in hindsight, the decision about the allocation of police resources had been appropriate”.
He said most evidence in the new hearings would be heard in closed sessions and the public would see “only part of the story”. The commission continues.
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation/asio-funding-stretched-before-bondi-but-spymaster-mike-burgess-defends-budget/news-story/b82bd136cc0902b8e295d2ef7ec96a7a
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d0bc64 No.24648242
>>24643186
>>24648147
New documents reveal Bondi gunman Naveed Akram remained on ASIO and police radar in 2022
Tom Lowrey and Sean Rubinsztein-Dunlop - 26 May 2026
Bondi gunman Naveed Akram was on the counterterrorism radar of police and intelligence agencies as recently as 2022, later than previously known, according to the domestic spy agency ASIO.
In a submission to the Royal Commission into Antisemitism and Social Cohesion, ASIO director-general Mike Burgess revealed Akram was subject to "residual risk processes" in NSW in 2022, three years before the Bondi attack.
ASIO has previously confirmed it investigated Akram in 2019, but assessed that he did not pose a terror threat at the time.
Anyone investigated as a potential terror risk can be listed by authorities as a "known entity".
The federal government's national counter-terrorism plan spells out the lingering risk posed by people who have been investigated and found not to pose a threat at that time.
"Some have undertaken attacks or attack planning years after a point-in-time assessment, which assessed that they did not pose a threat or were deemed to be of a lower threat level compared with other individuals, which security agencies were reviewing at that time," it reads.
Known entities are flagged in a database through the 'Known Entity Management Framework', which includes intelligence agencies and police forces across the country.
It aims to identify signs of radicalisation or re-engagement with networks.
Responding to questions from the royal commission, Mr Burgess conceded there was scope to improve the system as it currently works.
"Naveed Akram had been subject to residual risk processes in NSW in 2022," he said in the ASIO submission.
"While I am comfortable that reasonable judgements were formed through that process based on the known information, I would support a review of (redacted word) and supporting processes in each state and territory to ensure those processes remain fit for purpose, efficient and effective."
He suggested ensuring the current system aligns with best practice among Australia's Five Eyes partners — the US, UK, Canada and New Zealand.
The redacted version of Mr Burgess's submission does not refer to the Known Entity Management Framework, and it was unclear if there were other 'residual risk processes'; however, the ABC has previously reported that Naveed Akram was on the Known Entity Management database, which was managed by NSW Police.
His listing was downgraded in the years before the Bondi attack, by which time he was no longer on the database.
Authorities can prevent people from travelling abroad as part of the system, but Naveed Akram and his father, Sajid, were able to travel to Uzbekistan around 2022 and a former terror hotspot in the Philippines in the month before the massacre.
Mr Burgess gave evidence to the royal commission yesterday, when matters relating to what was known about the Akrams ahead of the Bondi attack were not raised.
He revealed that after ASIO raised the terrorism threat level in 2024, the agency reviewed its caseload of known entities dating back 12 months, but a resourcing decision meant that it did not extend to a re-examination of the Akrams.
The commission is investigating why the Akrams were never re-examined after ASIO's 2019 investigation.
Mr Burgess is expected to give further evidence to the commission in closed hearings.
ASIO never consulted on firearms licenses
The submission also revealed that ASIO has never been consulted by a firearms registry on whether or not to issue a firearms license.
Rules around firearms licensing have been reviewed in the wake of the Bondi terror attack, after it was revealed the gunmen carried out the attack with firearms licensed to Sajid Akram.
Work is continuing on developing a national firearms registry, linking existing state and territory systems — some of which have until recently relied on paper documentation.
In the submission, Mr Burgess confirmed ASIO has provided no direct input to licensing decisions.
"I am informed that ASIO has never received a referral from a firearms licensing authority, and has never given a security assessment relating to a firearms licensing decision," he said in the submission.
https://www.abc.net.au/news/2026-05-26/naveed-akram-on-asio-and-police-radar-2022/106723978
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d0bc64 No.24648264
>>24643186
>>24648147
Police ‘significantly understated’ risk to Hanukkah event, junior office ‘left to his discretion’
JAMES DOWLING - 26 May 2026
1/2
The Bondi Hanukkah celebration where 15 people were shot dead had a diminished police presence and was assigned the lowest internal risk rating without a threat assessment, but NSW Police say federal authorities must answer how terrorists planned a massacre undetected.
Three senior NSW Police commanders on Tuesday were grilled at the Antisemitism and Social Cohesion Royal Commission about why there was no risk evaluation for the December 14 Chanukah by the Sea event, why warnings by Jewish-run Community Security Group were ignored, and why a police operation dedicated to protecting Jewish residents wasn’t patrolling it.
The hearing was told how the commander for Sydney’s eastern suburbs – who gave evidence under the pseudonym ABQ – did not read the entirety of an email from CSG warning there was a “high” terror risk at the Hanukkah celebration and she never questioned a subordinate classing it as a “tier one” community event.
Under a police “escalation model”, tier one events require little oversight and no mandatory engagement with counter-terror or major event authorities.
There were no guidelines to assist the junior officer – an operations inspector dubbed “ABV” – and it was “left to his discretion”. ABQ also made no attempts to seek extra protection for the celebration.
The royal commission’s senior counsel assisting, Richard Lancaster SC, was scathing of the decision, suggesting to ABQ it was “a categorisation that was obviously too low” and “significantly understated the risk associated with the event occurring”.
“The event was planned with the information available to us at the time, and we allocated resources that I believed at the time were appropriate,” ABQ said.
“We treated the event based on the information we had at the time. I had no specific intelligence of a direct threat.”
She said she was happy with ABV’s assessment and agreed she “took no steps to intervene with it”.
“If I was unsatisfied, he would have known,” she said.
The commission heard on Monday from two CSG officials who warned police about the risks facing Chanukah by the Sea. One said he spoke to ABQ on the phone and asked for police to stay through the duration of the event, but she challenged this on Tuesday and said the CSG liaison should have known she “would not be the person you would call to talk about resources”.
The second CSG officer had emailed a week before the event saying the risk of terrorism and antisemitic vilification was “high”.
ABQ told the commission she didn’t read past the start of the email, but it wouldn’t have changed her decision regardless.
“I don’t know that I got that far into the email. I’ve certainly read it since December 14,” she said. “I don’t see that anything in it would have changed my thoughts.”
(continued)
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d0bc64 No.24648266
>>24648264
2/2
ABQ said officers from Operation Shelter had patrolled the Hanukkah event in both 2023 and 2024, but her superior officer, Sydney metropolitan area commander Peter McKenna, later disputed this in his evidence and said Operation Shelter had only been at the 2023 event.
Operation Shelter was established by NSW Police in October 2023 to provide high-visibility police protection for the Jewish community sites and events, among other offerings.
But by December it “didn’t exist” and was tasked mainly with monitoring protests, offering no proactive community protection, the commission heard.
Having ignored CSG’s calls for static police, ABV emailed eastern suburbs officers telling them there was “no need to stay the entire duration” of the Hanukkah event.
ABQ said this was “poorly worded” but added that it had not encouraged officers to leave the event unattended.
“Knowing all my senior leadership team, them knowing my expectations, I believe it’s poorly worded,” she said.
“‘No need to stay for the duration’ is aimed at the two inspectors who were the recipients, as they have lots of things that they need to do.
“They were aware that whilst we wanted a highly visible police present at these events, if they needed to leave, they could.”
Mr McKenna defended ABQ and ABV. “I wouldn’t sit here and say that best practice is not to do formal risk assessment, but we can’t do them for every event. We would be tied up doing paperwork for things that we can’t possibly achieve,” Mr McKenna said.
“I was aware of the high holy days that had occurred, and the lack of any criminal offending. I was aware that in the eastern suburbs, in particular, we did not see any movement of persons going across there and committing acts of personal violence. You put all of those things together, and I listened to a very experienced superintendent of police … so when I put all that together, I’m satisfied that that commander (was) across her brief and (did) not require any further resources.”
He made a veiled swipe at ASIO for failing to find a “specific threat”, saying “general threat” warnings about antisemitism had limited use if higher authorities let gunmen go undetected.
“We rely so heavily – because of our limited resources across competing demands – (on) specific intelligence to work with,” he said.
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation/police-significantly-understated-risk-to-hanukkah-event-junior-office-left-to-his-discretion/news-story/5ad3264d78a1040e066d9eef72be02e8
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d0bc64 No.24648285
YouTube embed. Click thumbnail to play.
>>24643186
>>24648147
Minns admits 'giant intelligence failure' led to Bondi terror attack
Patrick Brischetto - May 26, 2026
NSW Premier Chris Minns has stopped short of calling the state's counter-terrorism system broken, but admits a "giant intelligence failure" led to the deaths of 15 people in the Bondi terror attack.
Minns defended the work of the Joint Counter Terrorism Team, a mix of senior police and intelligence agencies, in thwarting "32 terrorism events" in the state since its formation, as their actions in the lead-up to the attack are analysed at a Royal Commission on Antisemitism and Cohesion.
Earlier today, reports from The Daily Telegraph claimed two calls to the National Security Hotline in 2007 and 2024 reporting Sajid Akram were not passed on to ASIO.
Akram was killed by police in the shooting, while his alleged accomplice and son Naveed, is currently before the courts.
Speaking to 2GB, Minns said he did not want to send the wrong message to the state by suggesting the current structures to combat terrorism are not fit for purpose.
"We've clearly had a giant law enforcement and intelligence failure in December of last year that we need to correct and make better,' he said.
"But I also don't want the public believing that no one talks to each other."
"These are law enforcement agencies that work with sophisticated technology and have had success in the past.
"You often don't read about it because they've acted before someone's committed a horrible terrorism event."
He said the failure to share the alleged pieces of intelligence with ASIO was more likely because it "slipped through the cracks" rather than a malicious effort to withhold key information.
Speaking to media this morning, he doubled down on his defence of the state's counter-terrorism agencies, though acknowledged he looked forward to the findings of the ongoing Royal Commission to learn from the mistakes that led to the Bondi shooting.
Yesterday, ASIO's chief Mike Burgess revealed there had been warnings that Jewish holy events were targets for terrorism attacks months before the shooting, which occurred at a Chanukkah celebration.
"I think there's parts of the intelligence and counter-terrorism architecture that need to be examined, and they need to be examined by the Royal Commission, and we need to make sure that we're learning from the mistakes that have been made," Minns said.
"But I'm not going to say it's broken, I don't want to send the message out today that if people have suspicions or concerns about something in their community, then they should contact authorities.
"I don't want the good work of those senior police officers and hard-working intelligence agencies just washed away."
https://www.9news.com.au/national/royal-commission-minns-admits-giant-intelligence-failure-led-to-bondi-terror-attack/ffeb9365-4492-4b3a-bbdd-187b6f7074f6
https://www.dailytelegraph.com.au/news/nsw/classified-intelligence-bombshell-sajid-akram-was-flagged-in-hotline-tipoffs-years-before-shooting/news-story/16cba764c52893f5c6670810bdd2be64
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FFhUB9mFIVY
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d0bc64 No.24648353
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>>24621717
>>24636062
>>24636076
>>24640021
Nineteen women and children linked to Islamic State arrive home in covert operation
MOHAMMAD ALFARES - 26 May 2026
1/2
Nineteen Australian women and children linked to the Islamic State terror group have arrived home in a high-security, covert extraction that culminated in a violent outburst from one of their handlers as the group was hurried through an airport.
Just one so-called ISIS bride remains in Syria, with The Australian on Tuesday revealing the family of Hodan Abby had recruited a high-profile lawyer to lodge a legal bid overturning an order banning her from entering the country.
No women were charged, but authorities indicated investigations into their activities were ongoing.
Two men transporting members of the Zahab family – who are linked to the Islamic State group – said the women and children were “of course” happy to be home.
The comments were made after the four women and six children were whisked away to Meriton Suites at Mascot, just minutes from Sydney airport.
“We are happy to be safe in our happy country,” the men, believed to be relatives transporting Nesrine, Amina and Sumaya Zahab, told The Australian.
While they were at Meriton, The Australian witnessed a Domino’s Pizza delivery driver dropping off four boxes of pizza to reception of the hotel.
While riot squad police were also seen at the hotel, when the Zahab family departed in a black Kia mini-van they were escorted from the hotel into the underground car park by a woman.
They then drove to the Zahab family home in southwest Sydney where more relatives were waiting as they arrived home.
Earlier, a BMW that is believed to have picked up Hyam Raad was also seen leaving the Meriton.
The Zahab family and Hyam Raad arrived in Sydney with their six children just after 5.30pm, while Kawsar Kanj and Kirsty Rosse-Emile landed in Melbourne with their seven children about an hour prior.
In Sydney, the women were offered NSW government support through which they could ask for health assistance from the Department of Communities and Justice upon arrival.
Riot squad cars were spotted at Sydney Airport ahead of the arrival, and there was a heavy police presence at the international arrivals terminal.
They were escorted off the plane upon their arrival, according to a passenger aboard the Qatar Airways flight, while other passengers waited for them to disembark.
A violent scuffle erupted in Melbourne when Rosse-Emile left the airport through the backdoor and one of her handlers punched a News Corp photographer in the camera, which hit his face. Rosse-Emily was picked up in a waiting BMW 5X.
The remaining Melbourne brides left the airport through side doors. An Australian Federal Police spokeswoman said assistance for the cohort leaving the airport in Melbourne was provided as part of a “joint agency operation decision in the interest of airport security”. She did not comment on what assistance was provided in Sydney.
The effort to bring back the cohort from the al-Roj detention camp was spearheaded by former lawyer and humanitarian campaigner Robert Van Aalst, who The Australian revealed as the mastermind behind the successful repatriations.
Mr Van Aalst was also seen leaving the airport in Melbourne on Tuesday night.
Nesrine left Sydney aged 21 but maintains she did not knowingly enter Syria but was taken into ISIS territory when trying to deliver aid to refugees in 2015.
She later married Australian-born jihadist Ahmed Merhi but claims it was a means of survival.
Sumaya, a mother of three, is the sister of former Sydney maths teacher Muhammad Zahab, who joined ISIS and was killed in a 2018 air strike.
Amina is the mother of Sumaya and Muhammad Zahab. She has expressed regret about following her son to Syria.
Rosse-Emile, who has two children, previously lived in Dandenong before travelling to Syria with her husband, Moroccan-born Nabil Kadmiry. Kadmiry later became an Islamic State fighter and was stripped of his Australian citizenship in 2019.
Little is publicly known about Kawsar Kanj and Hyam Raad but they were understood to have multiple children each.
(continued)
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d0bc64 No.24648356
>>24648353
2/2
A joint media statement between the NSW and Victoria Joint Counter Terrorism Teams on Tuesday night said the cohort were subject to a “range of operational responses” including “the searching of belongings and the downloading of their devices for investigative purposes”.
“Members of the Victoria and NSW Joint Counter Terrorism Teams (JCTT), deployed to Australian airports for a number of arrivals from Syria today,” the statement read.
“Police and the JCTTs will continue to engage with relevant stakeholders to ensure community safety is upheld. The safety of our communities remains a priority for all agencies.
“The NSW JCTT comprises the AFP, NSW Police Force, ASIO, and the NSW Crime Commission. The Victoria JCTT comprises the AFP, Victoria Police and ASIO.”
The statement also said: “No one arriving within this cohort has been charged, however, investigations into the activities of Australians who travelled to Syria – including those who have since returned – are ongoing.”
The Australian on Tuesday revealed the family of the last ISIS bride to return home was planning an urgent legal bid to overturn a temporary exclusion order banning her from entering the country.
Mother Hodan Abby escaped from her home in western Sydney with a friend when she was 18 years old and was trapped in Kurdish-run camps for year with her daughter, who suffers from shrapnel wounds in her head, hip and back.
he was banned from boarding a flight to Australia with the remaining cohort earlier this week.
Her relatives have engaged Birchgrove legal principal solicitor Moustafa Kheir to challenge the federal government-issued order, which is due to expire in February 2028.
The previous group of returnees arrived earlier this month, when three of four women were arrested and there were chaotic scenes at Melbourne Airport.
In a statement, Mr Burke reiterated the government “has not and will not provide any assistance to this group”.
“These are people who have made the horrific choice to join a dangerous terrorist organisation and to place their children in an unspeakable situation,” Mr Burke read. “As we have said many times – any members of this cohort who have committed crimes can expect to face the full force of the law. Our world-class law enforcement and intelligence agencies have been preparing for their return since 2014 and have long standing plans in place to manage and monitor them.
“The priority of the government, as always, is the safety of the Australian community.”
The Coalition asked Anthony Albanese during question time on Tuesday whether he would “admit” the repatriation of the women was “all part of the Labor government’s plan”.
“I make three points,” Mr Albanese said.
“I have nothing but contempt for anyone who has any sympathy with ISIS as I hope everyone in this chamber would agree. This should not be partisanship.
“Point two, the government has provided no assistance for these people.
“Point three, any breaches of the law will mean these people will face the full force of the law, to the extent available, upon the advice of the security agencies.”
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation/counterterrorism-squads-prepare-for-isis-brides-arrival/news-story/ef6d1d9871575d9a477bf050070a7d9b
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uBJC6hjNbkU
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d0bc64 No.24648559
YouTube embed. Click thumbnail to play.
>>24621731
>>24621748
>>24629058
Anti-corruption chief Paul Brereton resigns amid misconduct scrutiny
RICHARD FERGUSON and STEPHEN RICE - May 25, 2026
Besieged National Anti-Corruption Commissioner Paul Brereton has resigned after months of scrutiny over alleged conflicts of interest and criticism of his handling of corruption complaints.
It was revealed in February that Mr Brereton is being investigated for officer misconduct – and was reprimanded by federal Attorney-General Michelle Rowland – for failing to adequately address the nature of his ongoing ties to the Australian Defence Force.
The move followed revelations of undisclosed work by Mr Brereton with the Inspector-General of the Australian Defence Force, and concerns about the potential for conflicts of interest in corruption complaints about Defence.
On Monday, Mr Brereton said the focus on him was taking away from the NACC’s work and he was ready to leave the organisation now the anti-corruption body was up and running.
“The ongoing focus on matters relating to me personally rather than the commission’s work is drawing attention away from the commission’s core purpose of strengthening integrity in the commonwealth public sector, which has always been my primary focus as commissioner,” he said in a statement.
“I believe that the commission’s success is paramount, and not due to any single person. While I will continue to resist any suggestion of impropriety, I have decided that it is time, now that the commission is established and functioning with quality staff and good processes, to step aside and allow a new commissioner to lead it into the next phase of its development into a key and respected component of the integrity architecture of the commonwealth.”
Mr Brereton had continued to act in an advisory capacity to the Inspector-General over the Afghanistan war crimes inquiry, which he had headed, despite confirming he had relinquished his role as assistant to the IGADF role prior to becoming NACC commissioner.
Mr Brereton, who holds the rank of Major General in the Army Reserve, was also given special permission to stay on in the reserves past retirement age so he could continue to provide advice.
Mr Brereton had said his work with the IGADF was infrequent when it was later revealed that he had provided advice on more than 20 occasions. He then recused himself from Defence-related corruption referrals to the watchdog.
Neither Ms Furness or NACC CEO Philip Reed had been aware of Mr Brereton’s consulting arrangement with the ADF.
The NACC has been mired in scandal since it declined to investigate six public officials identified by the Robodebt royal commission for possible corruption, a decision that led to a finding of “officer misconduct” against Mr Brereton over a conflict of interest in the case.
The NACC’s decision was overturned after an independent review, but alarm over the agency’s lack of transparency and accountability has continued.
Last June, the NACC announced it was abandoning any further investigation of the Albanese government’s $2.4m compensation payout to Brittany Higgins, stating it had “conducted an extensive preliminary investigation into the settlement and found no corruption issue”.
Ms Rowland told Mr Brereton in October last year that his declaration of interests “do not provide details of the nature and extent of the activities you are undertaking at the request of IGADF”.
“No declaration was made of the extension in June 2024 of your compulsory Defence retirement age to August 2026. Nor did the commission’s responses to questions at Senate estimates in February 2025 adequately address the nature of your ongoing engagement and provision of advice to the IGADF.”
Greens senator David Shoebridge pointed out that Defence was “embroiled in a series of multi-million-dollar procurement scandals” and that the NACC had over 120 Defence referrals.
“Why is Commissioner Brereton being paid over $800,000 a year not to work on Defence referrals?’ Senator Shoebridge asked. “It remains untenable for Commission Brereton to stay as the NACC Commissioner given his repeated failure to deal with his own conflicts of interest.”
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation/politics/anticorruption-chief-paul-brereton-resigns-amid-misconduct-scrutiny/news-story/b1f1212d4fa87464582159316938c0ca
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Yt785ERjO1Y
https://qresear.ch/?q=Paul+Brereton
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d0bc64 No.24648642
>>24621731
Coalition sounds alarm over law change easing war crimes prosecution
ELIZABETH PIKE - May 25, 2026
1/2
Labor lowered the threshold to prove a war crime while an Australian soldier was facing the charge for the first time in the country’s history, with expectations the change could also affect the upcoming trial of the nation’s most decorated soldier Ben Roberts-Smith.
The opposition is expected to use the legal and constitutional affairs Senate estimates on Monday to grill department heads on why former attorney-general Mark Dreyfus changed the definition of “hors de combat” in 2024 while the prosecution of Oliver Schulz was on foot.
But the government said the changes were designed to make the definition consistent with international law, which was intended from the outset, even though this reform was not acted on until the first war crime case was brought forward in Australia almost 22 years later.
The modified definition is also expected to be used by the commonwealth in its case against Mr Roberts-Smith and any future war crimes prosecutions, after the Office of the Special Investigator said it would pursue further cases following the Brereton Report.
Mr Schulz and Mr Roberts-Smith are facing charges of war crime murder for allegedly killing people who were hors de combat, or “out of combat”, during their service with the Special Air Service in Afghanistan.
Labor successfully changed the definition in 2024 to make it less difficult for the prosecution to prove a victim was “out of combat” by establishing just two grounds that must be satisfied, instead of all three.
Since the law was introduced in 2002, the prosecution had to prove a victim was under the power of an “adverse party”, expressed an intention to surrender or could not defend themselves, and did not act in hostility and attempt to escape.
The argument collapsed if all three criteria could not be met, but the government’s changes require only that the victim was not hostile and tried to escape, along with any one of the other elements.
The watered-down changes were also applied retrospectively, capturing “any conduct engaged in or after September 26, 2002”, including court cases that have not been finalised.
At the time, Mr Dreyfus told parliament the change was designed to correct a “drafting error” dating back to 2002 while aligning Australia’s definition with international legislation.
Senator Murray Watt also assured parliament the changes would “not change the substance of the law” and were in line with the practice of the Australian Defence Force, which trained and operated under the definition used in the International Criminal Court.
However, a Senate standing committee flagged significant concerns with the new definition less than one month before it passed parliament in October 2024.
The committee warned Labor had provided “no information” about the impact of applying the law retrospectively back to 2002, and cautioned that this would go against the “basic rule of law” that people cannot be charged with offences that were not illegal at the time.
“The committee notes that applying this retrospectively may have a detrimental impact on individuals,” the committee’s report read.
A legal expert, who preferred to remain anonymous, said retrospective legislation “increases the likelihood that a person will be tried and found guilty of criminal offences, particularly serious criminal offences”.
They noted that current legislation was “ripe” for review, with the trial of Mr Schulz set to begin next February. A trial date for Mr Roberts-Smith’s matter is yet to be set.
(continued)
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d0bc64 No.24648646
>>24648642
2/2
At the time the changes were made, opposition legal affairs spokeswoman Michaelia Cash said the Coalition supported them based on assurances from the government that it would not change the “intended operation or effect of the definition”.
“I am relying on the advice provided to us by the Attorney-General’s office about the intent and the effect of the change and support it on the basis of the assurance that we have been provided,” Senator Cash told the Senate two years ago.
The Coalition did not withhold consent or block the amendment despite the Senate committee’s concerns.
Senator Cash told The Australian on Sunday the Coalition was “extremely concerned about the potential implications” of the changes, “which now appear to make it easier for war crimes to be prosecuted, and more difficult for defendants”.
“We will be exploring these issues in estimates this week.”
The change was a late addition to an omnibus bill and was not yet included when the Parliamentary Joint Committee on Intelligence and Security conducted its review.
A spokesman for Attorney-General Michelle Rowland said the government made the change as it was “committed to upholding international humanitarian law and ensuring Australia’s domestic law accurately reflects its obligations under the Geneva Conventions and the Rome Statute”.
“Retrospective application to 26 September 2002 ensures the law operates as originally intended … avoiding inconsistencies or gaps in the treatment of serious international crimes,” the spokesman said.
“This reflects the government’s clear intent that Australia maintain a fully effective and complementary jurisdiction to the International Criminal Court.
“Australia takes accountability for war crimes seriously. Ensuring the Criminal Code accurately reflects international law is essential to enabling Australia to investigate and prosecute the most serious international crimes, and to uphold its obligations as a state party to the Rome Statute.”
Mr Schulz became the first person in Australia charged with the war crime of murder after his arrest in March 2023, and has pleaded not guilty.
Mr Roberts-Smith was arrested and charged in April with five counts of war crime murder. The Victoria Cross recipient has always maintained his innocence and is expected to plead not guilty. Both men have been released on bail.
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation/coalition-sounds-alarm-over-law-change-easing-war-crimes-prosecution/news-story/6fdb4207673afff4f80912049fe31340
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d0bc64 No.24648660
>>24643181
Two men held over alleged role in aftermath of Dezi Freeman shootings
JOHN FERGUSON - 27 May 2026
Two men have been arrested by police over the aftermath of the Dezi Freeman police killings.
The men from northeast Victoria were arrested in relation to where Freeman went after killing the officers outside Porepunkah on August 26.
Police said in a statement: “Detectives from Taskforce Summit arrested two people this morning as part of their ongoing investigation into the movements of Desmond Freeman following the fatal shooting of two police officers in Porepunkah last August.’’
“A 48-year-old man and a 45-year-old man were arrested on 26 May at two separate locations in northeast Victoria.
“The pair will now be interviewed by police.
“The investigation remains ongoing and as such, we are not in a position to provide further details at this immediate time.”
The arrests come after the first stage of the coronial inquiries into the deaths of the police and Freeman, in separate incidents.
It was revealed that Freeman asked Victoria Police’s elite tactical officers to “have a beer” with him moments before he was shot dead during the dramatic siege.
Details of Freeman’s final hours in Thologolong and the Porepunkah killings were aired in the Victorian Coroners Court on Monday, where an inquest into the deaths of two police officers was heard alongside a separate inquest into his fatal police shooting.
The Porepunkah inquest heard Freeman had shot Detective Leading Senior Constable Neal Thompson in the face after he breached his makeshift home on Rayner Track, then took Senior Constable Vadim de Waart-Hottart’s service handgun after shooting him in the head from behind, later using it to fire again at Thompson when he was already dead.
Both inquests were attended by family members of the fallen officers, including Thompson’s sisters Dianne Thompson and Lois Kirk. De Waart-Hottart’s family was dialled in from Belgium.
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation/two-men-held-over-alleged-role-in-aftermath-of-dezi-freeman-shootings/news-story/12d802980309bf7a36281fbba25ab025
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d0bc64 No.24648677
>>24611802
>>24636284
Joe Hockey says he is nervous about AUKUS – and wants Albanese to cold-call Trump
Matthew Knott - May 26, 2026
1/2
Former ambassador to Washington Joe Hockey says he is worried about the possibility the United States will not supply nuclear-powered submarines to Australia as promised under the AUKUS pact because of faltering American production rates.
The former treasurer also urged Prime Minister Anthony Albanese to make a habit of cold-calling US President Donald Trump to improve their relationship and influence his thinking on world affairs.
Hockey’s remarks came as the incoming defence force chief Mark Hammond called for critics to “stop politicising” the AUKUS pact as he insisted the challenging project could be successfully delivered.
Under the AUKUS plan, the US is supposed to sell three Virginia-class attack submarines to Australia, starting from 2032.
But senior US navy officials have warned that US shipyards must start pumping out significantly more submarines to have any spare for Australia, raising the possibility of the defence force being left with a capability gap.
Hockey, who served as Australia’s top diplomat in Washington from 2016 to 2020, told the National Press Club that “for the first time, I’m a little nervous about the Virginias, and that’s after a few conversations on the Hill”.
The US, he said, “just has not got the production of the Virginia up to speed”.
Hockey’s remarks are notable because he runs a Washington-based lobbying firm that represents major defence companies and he has been a passionate champion of AUKUS.
His remarks differ from those of fellow former US ambassador Kevin Rudd, who told this masthead last week that there was “zero possibility” of AUKUS coming unstuck.
Asked whether there was a growing danger the sale of Virginia-class submarines could be delayed or pared back, Hockey said: “I think the risk has increased, and we need again to have a full court press on the ground in Washington.”
He said that “we’ve got to prove that we’re ready for the Virginias here and display the physical capability to house them and to support their presence here, not to give the Americans any hook not to deliver”.
Hockey did not join calls for Australia to develop a “plan B” for AUKUS, saying it was not like Albanese could “go down to Bunnings” and buy a fleet of alternative submarines.
Hockey singled out US Deputy Secretary of War Steve Feinberg as a powerful official that Australia needed to court to ensure Trump’s vow that AUKUS is going “full steam ahead” is followed through.
“We’ve got to get political buy-in, more political buy-in, so that the people who are actually making the decisions on US procurement are keeping us at the top of the list,” he said.
Hockey said there was “no problem at a military-to-military or bureaucracy-to-bureaucracy level, it’s just a question of whether they can actually build the Virginias fast enough”.
(continued)
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d0bc64 No.24648679
>>24648677
2/2
Trump’s former acting chief of staff, Mick Mulvaney, agreed with Hockey that it would be “really, really, really difficult” for the US to build enough submarines to provide any to Australia, despite strong bipartisan support for AUKUS in Washington.
Navy chief Hammond told a defence conference in Perth on Tuesday that “I think we should stop politicising ambitious, challenging programs” like AUKUS, saying he believed the US was turning the corner on production rates.
Hammond, who will become defence force chief in July, said: “I acknowledge there is political risk with this program. There will be for all three governments. It’s not just constrained to the US. After every electoral cycle, the Australian government will have to recommit to this program”.
The US Navy’s chief of naval operations, Daryl Caudle, said last year: “The only way we’ll ever make good on the AUKUS agreement is that we get to the 2.3 [build rate], and it is my goal to make good on that.”
The US is currently producing around 1.2 boats a year, meaning production will need to increase significantly to hit the 2.3 build rate figure.
Hockey said US allies were “really missing” a figure like the former Japanese prime minister Shinzo Abe, who developed a close relationship with Trump in his first term and spoke to him regularly on the phone.
Hockey lamented that world leaders now seem “afraid almost to pick up the phone to the president [and] have a conversation”.
“I mean, he answers phone calls from random journalists around the world, and it’s not hard to get his cell number,” he said.
“I’d encourage the prime minister to ring him occasionally. I mean, what have you got to lose? Australian prime ministers have been confidants of US presidents more than people realise, and I think the president of the United States is missing that back channel of advice.”
It has become something of a running joke among American journalists about how easy it is to obtain Trump’s phone number and call him for stories.
Albanese last year said he had Trump’s phone number after he remarked during an election debate that he’s “not sure that he has a mobile phone” and that texting a fellow world leader is “not the way it works”.
https://www.theage.com.au/politics/federal/joe-hockey-says-he-is-nervous-about-aukus-and-wants-albanese-to-cold-call-trump-20260526-p600oa.html
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d0bc64 No.24648692
>>24610615
>>24611227
Coalition pushes to amend Sex Discrimination Act after Giggle v Tickle
Ria Pandey - May 25, 2026
The Coalition is pushing to rewrite sex discrimination laws to define biological sex after a woman was found by the Federal Court to have discriminated against a transgender woman by removing her from a female-only networking app.
Earlier this month, the court upheld its finding that Giggle app founder Sall Grover directly discriminated against transgender woman Roxanne Tickle twice, when she chose to remove Ms Tickle from the networking app.
In 2013, the federal government – then led by Julia Gillard – amended the Act to make it unlawful to discriminate on the grounds of gender identity.
But the Act does not include a definition of man, woman or sex.
On Monday, National Party MP Alison Penfold introduced a private members bill which she said would include changes to ensure “sex is binary and biological”.
“The current Act sees sex as on a spectrum and that sex is changeable and that has enabled the court to take effectively rights away from women to their own spaces,” Ms Penfold said.
She clarified did not seek to remove gender identity as a protected attribute.
“I’m not seeking for blanket discrimination against transgender Australians,” Ms Penfold said.
“I’m simply trying to reflect reality and create the space and choice and safety where it’s necessary for women.
“And that should not be controversial.”
Nationals leader Matt Canavan, speaking alongside Ms Penfold, said the changes were about highlighting the “uniqueness” between biological men and women.
“We still then can also define and protect those that have different gender identities,” he said.
“But there is something unique about a biological female, a biological male, and it’s that binary definition of biological sexes that is now absent from our laws, possibly inadvertently absent.
“I’m not even sure the Julia Gillard government knew what they were doing that long ago.”
Ms Grover, also present at the press conference, welcomed the opposition’s support.
“Women and girls need protections in law,” she said.
“I would really just like this issue fixed as quickly as possible.”
https://www.news.com.au/technology/coalition-pushes-to-amend-sex-discrimination-act-after-giggle-v-tickle/news-story/4301ac031a2a2037485823c5121175ae
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d0bc64 No.24648784
>>24610615
>>24636351
Julia Gillard ducks questions on gender-based rights at Hay-on-Wye literary festival
JACQUELIN MAGNAY - May 26, 2026
Former Australian prime minister Julia Gillard has ducked a question at the Hay-on-Wye literary festival about the law she introduced in 2013 that restricts women’s gender-based rights.
A small number of pro-women campaigners attended the festival, where Ms Gillard was a panel member and introduced as a “kick-arse woman” on Monday evening local time. Earlier, the campaigners erected a large banner in the auditorium that read, “Julia Gillard Destroyer of Women’s Rights”.
One of the women attempted to ask a question of Ms Gillard towards the end of her hour-long talk, saying: “What about Sall Grover? Julia, you destroyed women’s sex-based rights with your legislation you passed in 2013, you made it impossible for women and lesbians to meet together without accepting men”, before she was interrupted by moderator Katya Adler, who said “we are finished”, to some applause from the audience members.
The attempted intervention comes just two days after a protest was staged outside the Australian high commission in central London in support of Ms Grover and amid increasing calls for a change to Australia’s sex discrimination laws. Around 100 people at the protest drew attention to the Australian legal position in relation to women’s spaces, demanding that the Act is changed similar to the UK Supreme Court ruling that has ruled that sex under the UK Act is based on biology, not feelings or identity.
Australian Ms Grover had attempted to create a women-only app called Giggle but was sued by Roxy Tickle, a biological male who identifies as a trans woman. In a full Federal Court appeal on May 15, the judges ruled biological men can have access to women’s spaces under the Sex Discrimination Act.
Ms Grover wrote in The Australian on the weekend: “The judges ruled that noticing a man looks like a man can itself be unlawful, because ‘looking like a man’ is now treated as a protected aspect of gender identity.
“They declared that sex is changeable under the Act. The legal category of ‘woman’ has effectively been made unisex. Women’s rights to single-sex spaces, forged through decades of advocacy, were rendered invisible.”
However, instead of prompting Ms Gillard about why she changed Australia’s Sex Discrimination Act and how it has now been interpreted by the law, the Hay festival panellists indulged themselves in an anti-male politician whinge-a-thon, discussing how “every single day” women are judged differently. No questions were taken from the floor.
Ms Gillard spoke about toxic masculinity, social media bans for young people, and how young Gen Z men are now more conservative than Baby Boomer males. But she failed to touch on how her government amended the Sex Discrimination Act to make it unlawful to discriminate on the grounds of gender identity.
Ms Grover had predicted such an outcome, writing: “As Julia Gillard steps on to the international stage this Monday to opine on misogyny and sexism, Australian women will keep cleaning up the disastrous legacy of her government’s 2013 changes.
“Everyone knows, deep down, that a woman is an adult human female. No court ruling, no quiet legislative amendment slipped through parliament and no amount of ideological pressure can rewrite that truth. This battle for women’s rights will not stop here. I will never be lectured on misogyny by that woman, and neither should you.”
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation/gillard-duck-questions-on-gender-based-rights-at-hayonwye-literary-festival/news-story/748d9a0586763c5c8c8e75088848d78f
https://www.heraldsun.com.au/news/national/protester-confronts-julia-gillard-branding-her-a-destroyer-of-womens-rights/news-story/fc0f35d0d0728198c8431a57ada73a9c
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d0bc64 No.24648876
>>24260370 (pb)
‘Bike boy’ Ryan Meuleman charged with carjacking
Seb Costello - May 7, 2026
The young man who nearly died after a collision with a vehicle carrying ex-premier Daniel Andrews and his wife has been charged with carjacking, after allegedly attempting to force a woman from her vehicle in front of her two young children.
Ryan Meuleman was allegedly on bail when he entered the woman’s vehicle while she sat with her family in a carpark off Henry Rd, Pakenham on Sunday May 3 at 9.55pm.
According to investigators, Mr Meuleman fought with the woman before a good Samaritan noticed the struggle and intervened, holding the alleged offender down until the police arrived.
He has been charged with carjacking, vehicle theft, stating a false name and breaching bail.
He appeared in the Dandenong Magistrates’ Court on May 4, where bail was refused.
Detectives from the Casey Crime Investigation Unit will allege the woman was not known to Mr Meuleman.
The woman and her children escaped the attack unharmed.
Mr Meuleman has been the subject of multiple court cases since he was injured in the dramatic collision with the Andrews’ Ford Territory in January 2013.
The crash, dubbed the “bike boy” case, resulted in Mr Meuleman – then 15 years old – being knocked off his bicycle while riding along a path in Blairgowrie.
Mr Meuleman was flown to the Royal Children’s Hospital where he spent 10 days battling life-threatening injuries and later lost part of his spleen.
Mr Meuleman’s father Peter told the Herald Sun there was “no excuse” for his son’s alleged actions, saying “the kid I knew and loved would never do this”.
“I knew he was in a bad place but this is unthinkable,” he said.
“There is absolutely no excuse for what has happened and Ryan wouldn’t be like this if he wasn’t drug affected.
“If children were involved, I don’t know what to say. Unforgivable. Absolutely unforgivable.”
Ryan Meuleman is currently suing Daniel Andrews in the Federal Court over public statements the former Premier has made in the years since the incident.
A person familiar with that case told the Herald Sun the recent charges do not change anything from their perspective and that they intend to proceed with the defamation action.
In court documents, Mr Meuleman alleges that due to Mr Andrews statements, he “has suffered and will continue to suffer substantial hurt, distress and embarrassment”.
In his 27-page defence document, Mr Andrews accused Mr Meuleman of using the action to gain publicity “rather than to seek vindication of his reputation or a solatium for injured feelings”.
The Herald Sun revealed in January that Mr Meuleman had checked himself into a Melbourne treatment centre for “psychological and other health issues”.
Those close to Ryan had noticed that his mental health had deteriorated in recent weeks.
Concerned friends attended Mr Meuleman’s Pakenham home on Monday and discovered the door open and his mobile phone lying unattended inside.
Mr Meuleman will return to court at a later date.
https://www.heraldsun.com.au/truecrimeaustralia/police-courts-victoria/bike-boy-ryan-meuleman-charged-with-carjacking/news-story/9eaf4f7dc92067dbf90c95f50124381a
https://qresear.ch/?q=Ryan+Meuleman
https://qresear.ch/?q=Daniel+Andrews
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d0bc64 No.24649775
YouTube embed. Click thumbnail to play.
>>24648021
Quad sharpens response to China with minerals and maritime push
JOE KELLY - 27 May 2026
1/2
Foreign Minister Penny Wong has joined fellow Quad nations in agreeing to mobilise $20bn in private and public funding to build more secure critical minerals supply chains and take fresh steps to champion energy and maritime security – including the joint delivery of port infrastructure in the Pacific Islands, starting with Fiji.
The new measures – announced at a meeting of Quad foreign ministers in New Delhi – are aimed at countering rising Chinese influence and building resilience in the wake of the US conflict with Iran which has disrupted global energy supply.
A meeting of the Foreign Ministers of Australia, India, Japan and the US has now elevated
co-operation on critical minerals as a major priority for the Quadrilateral Security Dialogue, and the range of initiatives unveiled will be widely interpreted as a response to growing Chinese ambition.
A new framework will identify critical minerals projects that could supply Quad markets and support them through the mobilisation of private capital or other government tools “such as guarantees, loans, equity participation, insurance, subsidies, and offtake or other commercial arrangements as appropriate.”
In addition, the Quad nations have agreed to strengthen maritime surveillance efforts in the Indian Ocean through a new initiative dubbed the Indo-Pacific Maritime Surveillance Collaboration (IPMSC).
US Secretary of State Marco Rubio, whose goal has been to turn the Quad grouping into
a vehicle for action, said the launch of the IPMSC would “leverage each of our countries’ maritime surveillance capabilities” to enhance information sharing.
“Related to that is also the expansion of the Indo-Pacific Maritime Domain Awareness Initiative, which provides and can provide near real-time commercial maritime domain awareness data to countries throughout the Indo-Pacific,” he said.
The idea is to enable the Quad partners to share real-time information about the vessels in the region in support of their shared objective to ensure a free and open Indo-Pacific region. The Quad aims to develop a comprehensive Common Operational Picture (COP) allowing member nations to share a common real time picture of maritime activity across the region.
Mr Rubio also said Quad members would be “partnering on issues of port infrastructure, in particular in response to insufficient port capacity in the Pacific Islands.”
“We’re announcing plans to work with Fiji to advance that country’s port infrastructure. It’ll be the first time that the Quad partners work together on a project, on a port infrastructure project,” he said.
“We believe it will be very successful and that it will serve as a model for other projects in the future.”
Member nations also issued a statement on Indo-Pacific Energy Security and are working to uphold energy stability following the widespread disruption to supply caused by the ongoing US/Iran conflict.
Areas of co-operation to deepen energy resilience among member nations will be identified, and a Quad Fuel Security Forum will be held to facilitate high-level discussions.
“On energy and fuel security, we’ll be announcing the Quad Initiative on Indo-Pacific Energy Security that will help strengthen regional energy resilience,” Mr Rubio said. “The Department of Energy from the United States will be hosting Quad partners later this year for a fuel security forum to further expand on this.”
(continued)
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d0bc64 No.24649776
>>24649775
2/2
Australian Foreign Minister Penny Wong said it was the third Quad foreign ministers’ meeting since Donald Trump was elected and revealed that Mr Rubio did update members on the “negotiations and the progress of those negotiations with Iran.”
“We need to see a diplomatic resolution,” Senator Wong said. “We need to see the Strait open. We need to see supply flow and I think that’s a consistent position of Quad members. So we were updated on that.”
Senator Wong noted that the Quad members held a discussion on energy in the wake of the US/Iran conflict, confirming that members had agreed to launch a new initiative on Indo-Pacific Energy Security.
A formal statement issued by all four Quad nations said that members would work together to secure “open, well functioning and stable energy markets, and resilient and diversified supply chains.”
The official statement noted the major disruption to global markets for energy products and other downstream derivatives including fertilisers, noting that members had convened at a time of “great challenges” as well as opportunities.
“In the midst of conflicts, geopolitical tensions, and strains on global supply chains, we reaffirm that peace, stability, and prosperity of the Indo-Pacific hinges on upholding international law, and the peaceful resolution of disputes,” Quad members said.
“We reaffirm our commitment to defending the rule of law, sovereignty, and territorial integrity. We recognise the immense potential of innovation, emerging technologies, and trusted partnerships to drive economic prosperity across the Indo-Pacific and beyond.”
Members opposed any destabilising or unilateral actions that sought to change the status quo in the region, including by force or coercion.
The situation in the Middle East was discussed, with members calling for the “safety and uninterrupted flow of global commerce through the Strait of Hormuz and the Red Sea” while condemning attacks on commercial shipping vessels.
“We emphasise the importance of upholding freedom of navigation and overflight, other lawful uses of the sea, and unimpeded commerce consistent with international law,” members said.
Ongoing concern was also expressed about the situation in the East China and South China Seas, including “dangerous and coercive actions” as well as the repeated obstruction of freedom of navigation and overflight, and the “unsafe use of water cannons and flares, and ramming or blocking actions in the South China Sea.”
The last Quad Leaders’ Summit was held in September 2024 when Joe Biden was the US President.
The next Leaders’ Summit was meant to be held in India in 2025 but did not take place amid tensions in US/India relations inflamed by trade tensions. Mr Trump ended up imposing tariffs as high as fifty per cent on its Quad partner – a move that was widely criticised at the time.
Another Leaders’ Summit has not yet been scheduled.
Asked about when it might happen, Senator Wong said there was “quite a lot happening in the world, and obviously President Trump is very deeply engaged at the moment on these issues in the Middle East.”
“I think you can see the commitment to the Quad by the commitment of the foreign ministers,” she said.
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/world/quad-sharpens-response-to-china-with-minerals-and-maritime-push/news-story/53656e2e04b74ec2a0eadbe4485d8642
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PZXtiBWYbno
https://www.reuters.com/world/china/australia-india-japan-us-quad-seeks-relevance-foreign-ministers-meet-new-delhi-2026-05-26/
https://x.com/SecRubio/status/2059226583601185002
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d0bc64 No.24649780
>>24648021
>>24649775
Chinese FM says it opposes forming exclusive groupings after Quad Foreign Ministers’ Meeting; bloc a patchwork of interests with divergences: Chinese expert
Zhang Wanshi - May 27, 2026
During the Quad Foreign Ministers' Meeting held in New Delhi, India, on Tuesday, the grouping expanded cooperation in critical minerals and energy while unveiling new measures to boost maritime surveillance and port infrastructure across the "Indo-Pacific," media reported. A Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson responded on the same day that China opposes forming exclusive groupings or engaging in bloc confrontation.
Foreign Ministry spokesperson Mao Ning made the remarks during Tuesday's regular press conference when asked to comment that the US, Japan, India and Australia have launched a maritime surveillance initiative for the so-called "Indo-Pacific" region, and also announced plans to partner with Fiji on port infrastructure. Mao said that China has stated its position on Quad on multiple occasions. Cooperation between countries should be conducive to regional peace, stability and prosperity, and not target any third party.
The Quad Foreign Ministers' meeting was chaired by Indian External Affairs Minister S. Jaishankar and attended by US Secretary of State Marco Rubio, Australian Foreign Minister Penny Wong and Japanese Foreign Minister Toshimitsu Motegi, Indian media outlet The Hindu reported.
In his media statement on Tuesday, Rubio claimed the Quad meeting decided to launch an Indo-Pacific Maritime Surveillance Cooperation Initiative. Rubio also announced expansion of the Indo-Pacific Maritime Domain Awareness Initiative among the Quad nations. He also claimed the Quad has decided to roll out a new initiative to boost port infrastructure in the Pacific Islands, according to The Hindu.
Rubio also announced the Quad Critical Minerals Framework, per The Hindu. This, he claims, will guide each of the countries to leverage economic policy tools and coordinate investment to strengthen critical mineral supply chains including in mining, processing and recycling.
This Quad cooperation was described by some media as having China in mind, with Reuters claiming that Quad countries share concerns about China. The Hindu report claimed the meeting came amid rising global concerns over the country.
Seemingly focusing on maritime surveillance, port construction, critical minerals and energy security, the Quad actually securitizes economic matters and turns development issues into bloc-based competition with clear strategic aims, Chen Hong, director of the Asia-Pacific Studies Center at East China Normal University, told the Global Times.
Echoing Chen, Li Haidong, a professor at the China Foreign Affairs University, told the Global Times that securitizing economic issues runs counter to the interests and aspirations of countries in the Asia-Pacific region.
Chen said that their so-called cooperation on critical minerals and energy security is not a purely market-oriented collaboration.
Despite rhetoric about a "free and open Indo-Pacific," the grouping's true aim is to reshape regional order through exclusive blocs, Chen added. Regional security cannot be achieved via surveillance, nor can energy security be realized by excluding China.
The brief meeting was the third such gathering of the group since September 2024. The four-nation group had lost some momentum last year after failing to hold a leaders' summit, amid tensions between US President Donald Trump and Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi over Washington's tariffs and other matters, per Reuters.
Japanese media outlet Mainichi also noted that no leaders' meeting has taken place since the launch of the second administration of US President, who has placed less emphasis on multilateral diplomacy.
The meeting comes against the backdrop of uncertainty over the pace of high-level Quad engagement, including delays in convening a leaders' summit that had been expected earlier, The Economic Times reported on Tuesday.
Foreign ministers did not comment on the possibility of a summit later this year, but over the weekend, Rubio said that diplomats would work toward a meeting later this year, Reuters reported.
Chen said that Quad members have a patchwork of interests. All seek to leverage the bloc but are reluctant to bear excessive costs for it. Their repeated emphasis on unity only reflects persistent internal rifts that need constant mending.
However, if cooperation is turned into confrontation and development into containment, it will backfire and arouse vigilance among regional countries, Chen added.
https://www.globaltimes.cn/page/202605/1362013.shtml
https://www.fmprc.gov.cn/mfa_eng/xw/fyrbt/202605/t20260526_11918267.html
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d0bc64 No.24649783
>>24636188
New Solomons Islands’ PM to visit Australia for talks with Albanese
BEN PACKHAM - 27 May 2026
New Solomon Islands Prime Minister Matthew Wale will visit Australia next week for talks with Anthony Albanese amid hopes the former China critic will prioritise ties with Canberra ahead of those with Beijing.
Mr Wale is due to meet with Prime Minister Albanese in Canberra on Wednesday, in his first overseas trip since he was elected by his country’s MPs nearly a fortnight ago.
The upcoming trip comes after Foreign Minister Penny Wong signalled Australia’s interest in upgrading the nation’s 2017 security treaty with Honiara if Mr Wale was prepared to do so.
Solomon Islands has been one of the Pacific’s most pro-China countries since it ditched diplomatic ties with Taiwan in 2019, signing a controversial security pact with Beijing in 2022.
Mr Albanese said Mr Wale would be “a most honoured guest” and would be accompanied by a number of his senior cabinet ministers.
“It says a lot that the first international visit which he is choosing to make is here in Australia,” he told parliament.
“Despite the global challenges that we confront, we recognise that we’ll be stronger if we face these things together. The challenge of dealing with climate change; the challenge of dealing with security issues in our region.”
Mr Wale opposed former Solomon Islands prime minister Manasseh Sogavare’s security deal with Beijing, which allowed Chinese police to operate in the country and opened the door to Chinese warships to visit for “logistics replenishment”.
He said in opposition he would publish the text of the security agreement, which has been kept confidential, but stopped short of saying he would overturn the agreement.
Australia’s former high commissioner to Solomon Islands James Batley has described Mr Wale’s election as an “opportunity for Australia”, but warned the new leader was unlikely to make any decisive shift against China.
Senator Wong told The Australian last week that Australia’s “job will never be done” countering Chinese influence in the Pacific.
She said the Albanese government was “very enthusiastic” about working with Honiara, and was open to upgrading the countries’ security ties.
“We congratulate him on his election, and we were looking forward to engaging with him and with the new government on Solomon Islands,” she said.
“We’re open to elevation of our relationships with the Solomon Islands, or with any Pacific country, but obviously we’ll listen to what the government and people in Solomon Islands want.”
The Australian revealed last year that Chinese police in Solomon Islands were fingerprinting residents and getting them to fill out household registration cards under the guise of “community policing”.
Their presence in the country has complicated Australia’s longstanding policing support for Solomon Islands and future assistance under a $190m commitment by Anthony Albanese to build a new police academy in Honiara and provincial policing posts.
Senator Wong said the Albanese government had made clear that security support in the region should be provided by the Pacific Island Forum, of which Australia is a member.
Australia has committed $400m to a region-wide policing initiative, is pouring resources into fighting the flow of drugs through the Pacific, and is working with regional partners to develop a rapidly deployable natural disaster response group.
“We’re ramping up our efforts in the Pacific. Why are we doing that? It’s because it’s the region where Australia’s interests are most on the line,” Senator Wong said.
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation/new-solomons-islands-pm-to-visit-australia-for-talks-with-albanese/news-story/5cec85316da79c896d6a93e17a967e37
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d0bc64 No.24649792
>>24621717
>>24636062
>>24636076
>>24640021
>>24648353
Returned ISIS bride Nesrine Zahab ‘wants to study nursing’
BIMINI PLESSER - 27 May 2026
The father of an ISIS bride repatriated to Australia says she wants to go back to university to study nursing or social work now that she’s home, and is apologetic for ever going to Syria.
Nesrine Zahab’s father, Zakaria, recalled the family’s emotional reunion on Tuesday night, and said the years she was in Syria were “the worst ten years of her life”.
“She’s sorry that she put us in this situation,” he said.
Nesrine Zahab, her cousin Sumaya and her aunt Amina were returned to Australia from Syria along with 16 other women and children in a covert and high-security extraction on Tuesday night.
The Zahab family and Hyam Raad arrived in Sydney with their six children just after 5.30pm, while Kawsar Kanj and Kirsty Rosse-Emile landed in Melbourne with their seven children about an hour prior.
Zakaria thanked Australia and Anthony Albanese for allowing the safe return of his family and told reporters he was overjoyed to have his daughter home.
“I’m flying,” the 71-year-old said, sitting outside the family home.
“I am very happy. I’m thanking Australia and especially the (Prime Minister).
“I hope Australia stays that way. The best of the countries.”
The three Zahab women, Hyam Raad, and their children, were taken to Meriton Suites at Mascot in Sydney after their arrival. While they were at Meriton, The Australian witnessed a Domino’s Pizza delivery driver dropping off four boxes of pizza to reception of the hotel.
Nesrine, who was a nursing student before she left Australia, wants to go back to university, Zakaria said.
Zakaria said his daughter hoped to study nursing again, or perhaps social work. He described her as someone who “loves helping people”.
Nesrine’s brother, Ibrahim Zahab, said she was afraid of how some members of the community would react to her being back in Australia.
“Of course she’s going to be fearful,” he told reporters.
“There’s people out there that don’t want her back.”
When asked about the family’s plan moving forward, Ibrahim and Nesrine’s other brother Mohamad said they “trust the government” and its processes.
“If my sister, or any of the sisters, have done anything wrong, then they’ll be faced with the full force of the law,” Mohamad said.
“If she’s done something wrong, then yeah, we do, we do accept the full force of the law,” he said.
“But at the same time, these guys are Australian citizens, their kids are Australian citizens … if you’re saying for them to leave, if you don’t like the law in Australia, then you must leave, because we, we’re accepting the law.”
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation/returned-isis-bride-nesrine-zahab-wants-to-study-nursing/news-story/7b84d0176b030317dfd94e7d34aab923
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d0bc64 No.24649800
>>24643186
Deputy police chief held 'reservations' over expanding powers of Jewish security groups
Phoebe Pin - 27 May 2026
1/2
The head of the NSW Police's investigations and counterterrorism operations has said he would have "considerable reservations" about expanding the powers of private Jewish security groups.
Deputy Commissioner David Hudson on Wednesday gave evidence to the Royal Commission on Antisemitism and Social Cohesion, which is examining the circumstances surrounding the Bondi terror attack on December 14, 2025.
Fifteen people were killed in the shooting, which occurred during a Hanukkah celebration called Chanukah by the Sea.
A number of volunteers from Jewish security organisation Community Security Group NSW (CGS NSW) were present at the time of the attack, but were not armed.
The commission has heard CSG NSW requested a static police presence for the entirety of the Bondi Hanukkah celebration, with one CSG NSW witness telling the commission he was told by NSW Police resources would not be available for the duration of the event.
Deputy Commissioner Hudson was on Wednesday asked about the relationship between CSG and NSW Police.
Counsel assisting Richard Lancaster SC asked Deputy Commissioner Hudson to explain his view that police would have "considerable reservations" about granting additional powers and privileges to CSG in respect to law enforcement.
"Isolating a particular group for additional powers within our community is problematic," Deputy Commissioner Hudson said.
"It creates a disconnect between groups. It can cause friction between groups if one particular element of society is afforded privileges that others aren't."
Weeks after the Bondi attack, NSW Premier Chris Minns flagged that arming CSG NSW would be considered.
Mr Minns said the state government needed to take a "deeper look at arming CSG" in a step that "we haven't taken in the past".
The premier addressed the issue again in late April, saying discussions were ongoing.
"The specifics in relation to that need to be sorted out around a de-escalation procedure," he said.
"Because if you've got police attending the scene of a crime or an active shooter, then we want to make sure that people are safe, both the CSG and New South Wales Police.
"It's not a straightforward change, but I'm convinced that it really is [in the] longer run, one effective measure we can make to ensure that the Jewish community feels safe when they go to the public event."
The premier’s office on Wednesday declined to comment further.
Intelligence sharing scrutinised
The second hearing block has also examined how intelligence about individuals who came to the attention of authorities was utilised and shared between agencies.
Deputy Commissioner Hudson said NSW Police had encountered some difficulty in that area.
"From our perspective we take a very open interpretation [of information sharing guidelines]. If there is risk or threat, we will share information with other agencies," he said.
"Other agencies can on occasions not be so forthcoming."
(continued)
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d0bc64 No.24649803
>>24649800
2/2
The inquiry’s last witness before entering closed hearings was NSW Police Assistant Commissioner Kirsty Heyward, who oversees the organisation’s firearms registry.
It has previously been revealed that Bondi gunman Sajid Akram was legally licensed for six firearms.
The commission has been told the NSW Police gun registry lacked a senior intelligence analyst when the position was terminated in November 2021.
Approval for its reintroduction was given in December 2023, but the position was not filled until March 2025.
Assistant Commissioner Hayward said others within the registry conducted intelligence activities in the absence of a dedicated officer.
“There was also police officers in the registry at the time the position was moved who had intelligence experience,” she said.
In February 2026 there were two additional senior intelligence analysts attached to the registry.
“There is three together at the moment. One’s permanent and two positions are temporary for 12 months,” Assistant Commissioner Hayward said.
End of open hearings
Wednesday marks the end of the open sessions for the second hearing block, with witnesses to provide evidence behind closed doors until June 12.
The hearings are to be closed to prevent prejudice to national security and criminal proceedings related to the Bondi terror attack.
Among those to be questioned during the closed hearings will be ASIO's Mike Burgess and Mike Noyes and NSW Police's Leanne Mccusker and Kirsty Heyward, as well as four officers from the NSW Police firearms registry.
Representatives from the Australian Criminal Intelligence Commission (ACIC) and the WA Police Commissioner, Col Blanch, are also expected to appear during the closed hearings.
Mr Lancaster noted the impact the closed sessions may have on public understanding of the circumstances surrounding the Bondi terror attack.
"An unavoidable consequence of taking some evidence in public hearings and later evidence in closed hearings is that the evidence taken publicly will only reveal part of the story," he said on Monday.
Mr Lancaster said a "relatively small number of people" had been authorised to access classified information in preparation for the closed hearings, including access to the confidential version of the commission's interim report.
One person who has not been called to give evidence or provide a statement is the NSW Police operations inspector in charge of resourcing for community events, including the Chanukah by the Sea celebration at Bondi.
Mr Lancaster said Royal Commissioner Virginia Bell made the decision "in light of information provided by NSW Police Force".
The officer was referred to by a pseudonym during this week's hearings "for reasons that will not be placed on the public record," Mr Lancaster said.
Details of the next hearing block have yet to be confirmed.
More than 13,000 submissions have been made to the commission, with most respondents identifying as Jewish.
Submissions will be accepted until June 14.
https://www.abc.net.au/news/2026-05-27/nsw-royal-commission-bondi-shooting-evidence-continues/106726256
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d0bc64 No.24649810
>>24643186
Holocaust denial, death threats directed at royal commission witnesses
JAMES DOWLING - 27 May 2026
More than a thousand hateful or antisemitic messages have been directed at witnesses appearing before the Bondi royal commission this month, according to a Jewish non-profit which handed over its findings to authorities.
The Dor Foundation, whose chief executive Tahli Blicblau gave evidence to the Antisemitism and Social Cohesion Royal Commission, released on Wednesday an analysis of online hate directed at witnesses from the first hearing block, in which 74 individual witnesses testified.
The Dor Foundation said it identified more than a thousand offensive posts and replies on Twitter/X, Facebook, LinkedIn, Instagram, TikTok, and YouTube between May 4 and 25. One of those targeted was an anonymous teenage girl who detailed the antisemitic bullying she faced in school.
The “most egregious examples” were passed to authorities, it said, including eSafety Commissioner Julie Inman-Grant and the royal commission.
Royal commissioner Virginia Bell on Tuesday warned she was “keeping a close eye” on potential witness intimidation and reprisal, including through online commentary, which the Dor Foundation said its referral had prompted.
The material it flagged included numerous conspiracy theories, mockeries of the Holocaust, and misogynistic tropes wound into antisemitic stereotypes.
“The abuse included death threats, Holocaust glorification, dehumanising racist slurs and intimidation campaigns targeting ordinary Australians, including children. This was not abstract hostility, but the direct targeting of individuals giving evidence about this very subject matter,” Ms Blicblau said.
“Many of the people targeted were not public figures. They are individuals sharing deeply personal experiences, but the message sent to them online was unmistakeable: speak up, and you will be punished for it.
“The royal commission was established to understand the lived experience of antisemitism. The online abuse that followed the first block of witness testimony is not incidental to the commission’s work – it is the commission’s work. It makes the need for this inquiry abundantly clear, and its ongoing work absolutely vital.”
In examples annexed to the report, online users pushed to “execute all Zionists”, called one witness a “fat oven dodger” and praised Adolf Hitler.
The commission’s first witness Sheina Gutnick was targeted, along with her late father Reuven Morrison who was murdered in the Bondi massacre.
“F*ck her and her chabad subhuman father,” one comment reads.
Antisemitism envoy Jillian Segal was branded a “cockroach” who “needs to be sprayed”, while the son of Holocaust survivors, Anthony Halas, was taunted with the phrase “Holohoax”.
At the beginning of the inquiry’s second week, a young girl given the pseudonym AAG described how she was targeted for being a Jew. When her testimony circulated online a social media user replied to say it was “terrible, that only a couple of students” were using Nazi salutes.
“We need to pick up those numbers. That is how we used to salute the flag and pledge allegiance,” the post reads. “White Power. Heil Hitler. Deport K*kes.”
Ms Blicblau said social media platforms were fostering antisemitism.
“We wouldn’t tolerate this sort of language or conduct in the physical world, and we shouldn’t tolerate it online where it can reach millions of people,” she said.
“Our online spaces have become the front line in the fight against antisemitism. Extreme hate no longer stays on the fringes. It spreads fast, it amplifies fast, and it becomes deeply personal very quickly.”
Ms Bell on Tuesday said the Australian Federal Police were investigating one case of alleged intimidation, which the AFP confirmed.
“We have received reports from a number of witnesses concerning a dramatic increase in online hate messages after they have given evidence,” the commissioner said.
The Australian previously reported how prominent anti-Israel activist and columnist Clementine Ford had joined the pile-on against Melbourne saxophonist and composer Joshua Moshe after he detailed being doxxed and having his career stunted.
Ford replied to an article reporting his testimony, saying: “Oh well.”
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation/holocaust-denial-death-threats-directed-at-royal-commission-witnesses/news-story/994612626d252ad1c1fc579cb936cbba
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d0bc64 No.24649818
>>24576463 (pb)
>>24643186
Man banned from going near Jewish hate inquiry after allegedly wearing swastika shirt outside hearing
CLAREESE PACKER - 27 May 2026
A man who allegedly wore a swastika shirt outside an inquiry into Jewish hate in Australia has been banned from going near the inquiry and promoting anti-Semitism, court documents reveal.
Ian Minus, 68, is accused of wearing a swastika on a T-shirt outside a Clarence St building in Sydney’s CBD, where the Royal Commission on Anti-Semitism and Social Cohesion was being held.
The shirt read “Anti-Semitism. Proud to be accused. Speak up!”
Court documents seen by NewsWire show Mr Minus is now barred from going within 200m of the royal commission as per his bail conditions.
He has also been prohibited from promoting anti-Semitism in public or on social media.
The 68-year-old was issued a move-on direction by police officers outside Clarence St on May 6 during the first week of the commission’s hearings.
He was charged with behaving in an offensive manner in/near public place/school and cause prohibited Nazi symbol to be displayed in a public place.
Mr Minus has now been hit with an additional charge of knowingly display by public act Nazi symbol without excuse, according to court documents.
Mr Minus claimed he was just having a coffee when approached by reporters outside the commission, asking them “Is this a swastika?” and “Is there a royal commission here, is there?”
Just metres away inside, Jewish Australians were sharing their harrowing experiences of anti-Semitism.
“I’m sorry, I’m just enjoying a cup of coffee in the streets of Sydney. Why am I being assailed in such fashion?” he said, later pointing to his shirt and saying “I am proud of this statement”.
His matter will next be before the courts on June 3.
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation/man-banned-from-going-near-jewish-hate-inquiry-after-allegedly-wearing-swastika-shirt-outside-hearing/news-story/2a761425ccbf7ee1d2a6abe86e89ce14
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d0bc64 No.24649831
>>24610615
>>24648692
Human rights chief argues trans women could be victims of pregnancy discrimination
ELIZABETH PIKE - 27 May 2026
The Australian Human Rights Commission has shockingly suggested that men who identify as female could be discriminated against on the grounds of their “potential pregnancy,” despite conceding that biological males cannot get pregnant.
The AHRC’s Sex Discrimination Commissioner Dr Anna Cody told the opposition at a budget estimates hearing on Wednesday that transgender women were eligible for protection if an employer did not hire them because they wanted or planned to get pregnant.
Dr Cody also accepted there was nothing stopping a man from “putting on a dress, walking in, and claiming the protections” under the Sex Discrimination Act, as it would be up to the court to decide if he was discriminated against.
Opposition legal affairs spokeswoman Michaelia Cash told the hearing she was “very confused” by the argument as a “biological male cannot get pregnant”.
“If they can’t become pregnant, how can you then become potentially pregnant?” Senator Cash asked.
Dr Cody said the issue was “about the unlawful treatment by the employer”.
“If someone is treated unfairly on the basis of pregnancy or potential pregnancy then that is unlawful discrimination on the basis of pregnancy,” Dr Cody said.
“Someone who is a trans woman may be assumed to be pregnant or to be able to be pregnant.”
Dr Cody said the protections would “not apply to a man” but she would not accept that men and trans women were “both biologically” male.
“It makes no sense,” Senator Cash said, “you stated, a biological man can’t get pregnant, am I correct? Because if not, I’ve got to go back to school, I seriously do.”
“With all due respect it is the absurdity of the law yet again, which shows again the law needs to be changed because for the record, biological men, doesn’t matter which way you cut it, you cannot get pregnant.
“And quite frankly, it is an insult to women who are actually discriminated (against) because they want to have children.”
Senator Cash’s call to reform the Sex Discrimination Act comes after the Federal Court rejected Sall Grover’s appeal in her case against trans woman Roxanne Tickle, who accused the Giggle for Girls founder of discrimination for blocking her from the woman-only networking app.
The decision revived the debate about safe spaces for women and the definitions of gender law in Australia.
Ms Grover posted the budget exchange to social media on Tuesday night and tore into the debate.
“A lot of people have struggled to believe me when I say that the Australian Human Rights Commission is giving pregnancy protections in law to men who claim to be women, because it’s so stupid it’s hard to believe anyone would say it,” Ms Grover captioned the post.
Former Czech-American tennis champion Martina Navratilova told Ms Grover “the further they go, the farther they fall … not a matter of if but only a matter of when” in a comment on the post, as the exchange picks up international attention.
Nationals MP Alison Penfold introduced a private members’ bill to parliament on Monday proposing an overhaul of the Sex Discrimination Act to reinstate the biological definitions of “man” and “woman” that were stripped under the under the Gillard government reforms.
The bill was drafted before the Giggle vs. Tickle case but aims to address the issues raised by the case.
Author and women’s rights activist JK Rowling re-posted a video of Ms Penfold’s speech to parliament with her 13.8m followers. The MP for Lyne told The Australian that Dr Cody’s comments “once again” demonstrated the urgent need for reform and legal clarity.
“When a senior public official responsible for administering and interpreting the act argues that men can be ‘potentially pregnant’, ordinary Australians are entitled to ask whether the law has drifted so far from common understanding that it no longer provides certainty or confidence,” Ms Penfold said.
“This is precisely why parliament cannot continue to avoid the issue. The courts and now senior officials have exposed deep ambiguity in the law.”
One Nation Barnaby Joyce added his voice to the issue on Thursday morning, telling 2GB the “potential pregnancy” argument was “total and utter crap”.
Dr Cody and the AHRC were contacted for comment.
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation/politics/human-rights-chief-argues-trans-women-could-be-victims-of-pregnancy-discrimination/news-story/a2e38dde8d9f0e662931ba9b67904c2a
https://x.com/salltweets/status/2058732168101433693
https://x.com/Martina/status/2059219726656577683
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d0bc64 No.24649835
ABC news boss Justin Stevens quits abruptly
JAMES MADDEN - 27 May 2026
ABC news director Justin Stevens has quit effective immediately, citing “professional and personal” reasons for his sudden departure.
Stevens, 42, has been the news chief at the public broadcaster for the past four years, having been promoted to the role by former ABC managing director David Anderson in 2022 despite having never previously held a senior managerial position.
He formally tendered his resignation to current ABC MD Hugh Marks late last week, and informed staff of his immediate departure in a statement on Wednesday afternoon.
The ABC is expected to announce Mr Stevens’ successor in coming days.
The Australian has confirmed that it will be an external appointment, which will be the first time this century that the ABC news boss hasn’t been promoted from within the organisation.
Mr Marks has worked closely with several senior news managers in commercial media, given his six years as CEO of Nine Entertainment from 2015 to 2021, prompting speculation that the next ABC news boss could be recruited from that organisation.
In his farewell note to staff, Mr Stevens said after 19 years in various roles at the public broadcaster, it was “the right time to move on”.
“There is no more complex news organisation in the country, no more scrutinised institution, and few so laden with public expectations,” he said.
“In that context, I have sought to strengthen and defend our journalism without being blind to our stumbles; to meet the state of constant change in the digital age; and to improve our culture in News to one where we hold ourselves to the same standards as we do of others in the broader community.”
Mr Stevens’ four-year tenure as ABC news boss was not without controversy, most notably in 2024 when he oversaw the notorious “fake gunshots” scandal that engulfed the 7.30 current affairs program when it was accused of misrepresenting the actions of Australian soldiers during a skirmish in Afghanistan.
A common criticism of Mr Stevens from within the ABC was that he was unwilling – or too slow to intervene – when some senior journalists at the public broadcaster operated outside the strict editorial guidelines of the organisation’s charter, and was too sensitive to external scrutiny of his editorial team.
Early in 2024, he sent an email to all editorial staff urging them to “stay united” following a wave of criticism of the ABC news department.
“During challenging times it’s important we stay united, not just for each other but for the public we serve,” he wrote in the email.
“There are those who, for their own reasons, want us to be divided, who downplay the progress we’ve made and who benefit from our internal conflicts.
“Let’s continue to pull together on this.”
It’s also understood Mr Stevens has not always seen eye-to-eye with Mr Marks, nor ABC chairman Kim Williams.
In a statement, Mr Marks thanked Mr Stevens for his “incredible commitment to the ABC in the various roles he has performed during his 19 years with the organisation”.
“I am grateful to have seen the strength of Justin’s editorial instincts and to have observed his commitment to the ABC and audiences,” Mr Marks said.
Mr Stevens’ resignation was publicly announced just 24 hours before ABC executives – including Mr Marks – were due to face a Senate estimates hearing.
It’s understood that although Mr Stevens has previously appeared alongside Mr Marks at Senate hearings, he was not scheduled to front Thursday’s inquiry.
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/business/media/abc-news-boss-justin-stevens-quits-suddenly/news-story/b7ae07e1ddeb46b091a4e92ae13a4292
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d0bc64 No.24649839
>>24643181
>>24648660
Two men arrested, then released after investigation into Dezi Freeman’s movements
Isabel McMillan and Sherryn Groch - May 27, 2026
Two people who were arrested as part of the investigation into the movements of police killer Dezi Freeman have been released, “pending further enquiries”.
Police on Tuesday afternoon confirmed two men, a 48-year-old and a 45-year-old, had been arrested at separate locations in Victoria’s north-east and were being interviewed.
But in a statement on Wednesday morning, police said the two men had been “released pending further enquiries”.
“The investigation remains ongoing and as such, we are not in a position to provide further details at this immediate time.”
After killing Detective Leading Senior Constable Neal Thompson and Senior Constable Vadim de Waart-Hottart on August 26 last year, Freeman fled into the bush with one of their stolen guns, sparking the largest manhunt in Victoria’s history.
More than 200 days later, on March 30, surprise intelligence led police to a remote hideout in Thologolong, near the NSW border, where Freeman was shot dead by heavily armed tactical officers.
On Tuesday, some locals who were raided during the early manhunt for Freeman told this masthead they were bracing for police to come knocking again as detectives now hunt for those who may have helped the skilled bushman evade authorities for so long.
Jim Rech, a former friend of Freeman’s from the area, did not know who had been arrested but said a police drone had been spotted surveilling his own property last month in the middle of the night. “And I hadn’t seen Dezi in nearly four years,” he said.
A man and a woman were arrested in April in relation to the Freeman manhunt, but they were both later released without charge, pending further inquiries.
The latest arrests on Tuesday come just a day after new details were revealed at the Coroners Court of Victoria during two separate directions hearings into the three deaths.
State coroner Liberty Sanger was on Monday told that on August 26, 2025, 10 police officers attended the Porepunkah property where Freeman was living with his wife and their young children to execute a search warrant as part of an investigation into allegations of historical child sexual abuse.
At the time, Freeman was a person of interest in connection with an alleged sexual assault of a child aged under 16 and attempting to involve a child in the making of child abuse material.
What followed was a fatal shootout, after Freeman armed himself with a shotgun and opened fire, killing two officers and injuring two others, one seriously.
An inquest for the slain officers has been earmarked for March. A separate inquest will be held for Freeman with a date yet to be determined.
https://www.theage.com.au/national/victoria/two-men-arrested-after-investigation-into-dezi-freeman-s-movements-20260526-p600u4.html
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d0bc64 No.24649852
>>24621731
>>24648559
War crimes investigators refer media leaks on Ben Roberts-Smith arrest to corruption commission
Tom Lowrey - 27 May 2026
The leaking of information to the media ahead of the arrest of former soldier Ben Roberts-Smith has been referred to the National Anti-Corruption Commission (NACC).
The Office of the Special Investigator (OSI), which is investigating war crimes, and the Australian Federal Police (AFP), have jointly taken the matter to the corruption agency.
Mr Roberts-Smith's arrest on multiple charges of the war crime of murder took place at Sydney Airport on April 7, as he landed on a flight from Brisbane.
Media officers from the Australian Federal Police filmed his arrest taking place, and later distributed that vision to media outlets.
But during a Senate estimates hearing last night, officials from the OSI were questioned about how some media outlets came to be at the airport ahead of the arrest.
Nine News said it had reporters at the airport ahead of the plane's arrival, and it broadcast images taken from inside the terminal.
OSI director-general Chris Moraitis told the estimates hearing he was alarmed that details of the planned arrest had spread.
He said officers noticed media around before the arrest took place.
"That's a matter that concerns me, that media seems to have been privy to things," he said.
"We're taking steps to ascertain what happened there."
Mr Moraitis said the matter was being taken to the anti-corruption commission.
"The AFP and I have written to the NACC about this, asking them to consider and provide information about that," he said.
"We believe there was an unauthorised disclosure.
"It surprised me that that happened, because we've usually been pretty good at keeping a low profile."
Ten war crimes investigations continuing
In earlier evidence, the OSI detailed its continuing work investigating war crimes committed by Australian soldiers abroad.
The OSI was established in early 2021 to investigate findings from the Afghanistan Inquiry, which found credible allegations of war crimes committed by Australian soldiers.
Mr Moraitis said of the 53 investigations it launched, 39 had been discontinued and 10 remained ongoing.
Two have proceeded to prosecution, with charges laid against Mr Roberts-Smith and former soldier Oliver Schulz.
Mr Moraitis said the OSI was working to resolve the remaining cases "soon".
"Soon can mean anywhere from six months to a year and a half," he said.
"We are actively pursuing those investigations with a view of coming to a conclusion either way, whether we refer matters to the DPP, or decide there is insufficient evidence."
https://www.abc.net.au/news/2026-05-27/ben-roberts-smith-media-leaks-investigated-corruption-commission/106725918
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d0bc64 No.24649871
>>24599808
>>24621731
>>24648642
War crime accused soldier Oliver Jordan Schulz to attend paratrooper funeral
Tom Wark - 27 May 2026
An ex-special forces soldier will have to stay tight-lipped about his upcoming war crimes trial when he attends the funeral of a fellow SAS veteran.
Oliver Jordan Schulz successfully applied to have his bail conditions varied in the NSW Supreme Court on Wednesday to attend the funeral of a fellow Afghanistan veteran in Sydney.
The former Special Air Services soldier has pleaded not guilty to the war crime of murder over the death of Afghan farmer Dad Mohammad in 2012.
His bail prohibits him from making any contact with people who may be prosecution witnesses, including some who served with him in Afghanistan, but the condition will be removed for one day to allow Schulz to pay his respects to a fellow serviceman.
A memorial service for Warrant Officer Lachlan Muddle, who died during a parachute exercise on May 11, will be held at Holsworthy Barracks on Friday.
WO Muddle collided with another soldier a few hundred feet above the ground while wearing night-vision goggles and suffered fatal injuries during the high-altitude training exercise for the Australian Defence Force's parachute school.
While Schulz has been allowed to attend the funeral, he will not be allowed to discuss any developments in his case with other attendees.
"For the duration of Mr Schulz's presence at the funeral, the applicant is not to discuss … any aspect of the current prosecution against him," Justice Peter Hamill ordered on Wednesday.
Schulz was the first serving or former ADF member to face a war crime charge of murder under domestic law.
Footage from a helmet camera, first aired publicly by the ABC Four Corners program in March 2020, appears to show Schulz and his squad approach a 25- or 26-year-old man in a wheat field in Afghanistan's Uruzgan Province.
Schulz then seems to fire three shots at Mr Mohammad, who was on his back with his hands and knees raised.
Justice Hamill heard that prosecutors, defence lawyers and legal representatives of the federal government had been conducting tours of various Sydney courthouses to determine which might be suitable for Schulz's complex trial.
Complicating the matter is the need for two separate courtrooms to be available simultaneously, so evidence that is suppressed on national security grounds can be heard in a completely closed court.
Prosecutor Sean Flood SC was cautioned by the judge for asking for a Federal Court courtroom for the trial without consulting the chief justice of NSW.
"Any approach to our colleagues … the preference is that you go through the chief justice," Justice Hamill said.
"The consequences of not doing so might not be what you're after."
Schulz's matter will return to court for two weeks of pre-trial hearing on August 10.
He is set to face a trial in February.
Fellow SAS veteran Ben Roberts-Smith became the second soldier to be charged with war crimes in April.
He faces multiple charges of the war crime of murder relating to incidents that allegedly occurred while on deployment in Afghanistan.
Lifeline 13 11 14
https://www.lifeline.org.au/
Open Arms 1800 011 046
https://www.openarms.gov.au/
https://au.news.yahoo.com/war-crime-accused-soldier-attend-035422262.html
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d0bc64 No.24653712
YouTube embed. Click thumbnail to play.
>>24621717
>>24648353
‘ISIS bride’ Rayann El Houli charged with terror offences as AFP reveals eight investigations
Michael Bachelard - May 28, 2026
1/2
The return of Islamic State-linked women to Australia has opened up new avenues of investigation for federal police, leading to fresh charges against a Melbourne woman who arrived back from Syria eight months ago.
Australian Federal Police arrested Rayann El Houli, 34, on Thursday and charged her with terror offences, citing evidence they had obtained since the return of four other so-called ISIS brides earlier this month.
AFP commissioner Krissy Barrett told a Senate Estimates hearing that police initially did not have enough evidence to charge El Houli, but an ongoing “six-month investigation, plus the recent return of four women and their children from Syria three weeks ago, has collected new relevant evidence”.
Barrett did not elaborate on how the evidence was collected, but said it “enabled a number of search warrants” to be carried out in Broadmeadows and North Fitzroy.
Police charged El Houli with entering or remaining in a declared area and being a member of a terror organisation. These charges carry a maximum 10-year sentence.
El Houli fronted the Melbourne Magistrates’ Court on Thursday afternoon, and will apply for bail on Monday. Her defence counsel, Peter Morrissey, SC, said she suffered from a significant post-traumatic stress disorder.
Morrissey said El Houli cared for four children who were “doing well” since they escaped from Syria camp with her and returned to Australia in September.
“My client is a mum [who] is very much caught up in [her children’s] life,” Morrissey said. “The reality of their situation is they too have come out of the camps.”
Sources close to the families have said one of El Houli’s children was wounded by a gunshot in the final days of the so-called caliphate in 2019.
Prosecutor Andrew Sprague told the court he wanted to play five videos during next week’s hearing that depicted El Houli’s children and showed battle scenes with music in the background. Morrissey said his client “was very distressed at the prospect of being shown any images” with her children in them.
“She suffers from significant post-traumatic stress disorder,” Morrissey said. “It’s a touchy, difficult thing, your honour.”
El Houli returned to Australia from Syria with her sister last September after the pair paid people smugglers to escape the al-Hawl detention camp and made their own way to Lebanon. They were issued passports at the Australian embassy in Beirut and returned to Melbourne.
The charges against El Houli are the same as those laid against another woman, Janai Safar, who returned to Sydney from Syria earlier this month.
None of the six so-called “ISIS brides” who returned on Tuesday to Sydney and Melbourne have been charged, but AFP commissioner Barrett flagged the possibility of further arrests, telling estimates that eight separate joint counter-terror team investigations were underway.
“Those who have returned from internally displaced persons camps in Syria are subject to a range of investigative strategies and will be held to account if they are found to have breached Australian laws,” Barrett said.
“Any perceived delay in charges does not indicate investigations have ceased.”
(continued)
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d0bc64 No.24653713
>>24653712
2/2
AFP Deputy Commissioner Hilda Sirec declined to answer a question about whether women who had returned from the camps would be interviewed and asked for evidence against each other.
“I won’t outline our operational strategies or who could face charges in the future, but I will confirm investigations are continuing in all recent adult female returnees who spent time in internally displaced persons camps in Syria.”
She said the latest arrest should be seen as a sign of the agency’s determination to continue “highly complex” investigations for as long as it took.
“I also want to underscore that a period of time without charges being laid is not an indicator that the investigations have ceased,” Sirec said, announcing the charges against El Houli.
Police needed to be able to take the time and effort to make sure that the evidence was admissible and to a legal standard, she added.
She also would not comment on what terror threat was posed by Hodan Abby, who was prevented from leaving Syria this week because of a temporary exclusion order imposed by the Albanese government.
Home Affairs Minister Tony Burke said extensive community consultation had been done ahead of the return of the Islamic-State linked women who have returned to Australia from Syria.
“The government is not involved in settling people at all. We have had citizens return, as we’ve had citizens have self-managed returns before we came to office, including 45 men who had gone there to fight,” Burke said in question time.
“But in terms of the consultation with the community, I can give examples of consultation that has been very powerful that has happened in the lead-up to when it was first reported that these individuals might seek to return,” he said, which included the Assyrian and Chaldean Catholic communities.
“I’d also add to that, probably no meeting more powerful than when a delegation came here from Wagga, from the Yazidi community, which involved one woman who, from memory, she would have been 19, had herself effectively been a slave,” he said.
https://www.theage.com.au/politics/federal/isis-bride-charged-with-terror-offences-eight-months-after-return-20260528-p601nt.html
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qGKSHumkGHM
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d0bc64 No.24653721
>>24621717
>>24648353
>>24653712
Rayann Elhouli remanded in Melbourne over alleged ISIS membership
BEN PACKHAM and MOHAMMAD ALFARES - 28 May 2026
Australian Federal Police Commissioner Krissy Barrett has revealed the AFP and its partners have eight separate counter-terrorism investigations under way into Australian ISIS-linked families who spent time in Syrian camps.
In her opening statement to a Senate estimates hearing, Ms Barrett also revealed the arrival of four ISIS-linked women from Syria to Australia earlier this month allowed police to charge an alleged ISIS supporter who smuggled herself into the country eight months ago.
That woman, Rayann Elhouli, was formally charged for allegedly entering and remaining in a declared conflict zone and joining a terrorist organisation.
The 34-year-old woman, who was arrested in Broadmeadows after spending eight months in the country following her return from Syria’s al-Hawl internment camp, appeared for a brief filing hearing at the Melbourne Magistrates’ Court. She was remanded in custody.
Ms Barrett revealed that following the arrival of Kawsar Abbas, her daughters Zeinab and Zahra Ahmad as well as Janai Safar earlier this month, new evidence had been gathered against Ms Elhouli.
“Any perceived delay in charges does not indicate investigations have ceased. Today’s arrest and charge is a case in point,” Ms Barrett said.
“Furthermore, today I will reveal there are eight separate joint counter-terrorism team investigations into the families who have returned from camps in Syria or remain overseas.”
Ms Elhouli, a mother of four, returned to Australia on September 26 with her sister after the pair escaped the now closed al-Hawl camp with people smugglers and made their way to Lebanon.
They were issued passports at the embassy in Beirut with support from the Albanese government and arrived in the country without gaining any media attention.
“On their return, the Commonwealth Director of Public Prosecutions determined there was insufficient evidence to charge the two women,” Ms Barrett said.
“Off the back of that advice, the Victorian Joint Counter Terrorism Team, which includes Victoria Police, the AFP and ASIO, continued Operation Howth while the returnees resettled in Australia.
‘That domestic six-month investigation, plus the recent return of four women and their children from Syria three weeks ago, has collected new relevant evidence for Operation Howth.”
That new evidence has enabled police to conduct a number of search warrants to be executed on Thursday in Broadmeadows and Fitzroy North, which led to the terrorism-related charges against Ms Elhouli.
Before chief magistrate Lisa Hannan, she appeared for a brief filing hearing where her lawyers said she suffered from PTSD and would require medical attention while in custody.
Although no bail application was sought, Ms Elhouli will remain behind bars until her next court appearance.
Members of the Victoria Joint Counter Terrorism Team seized a suspected stolen motor vehicle, electronic devices, documents and photographs, which will undergo forensic examination.
It will be alleged Ms Elhouli travelled to Syria with others, including a man, to join ISIS. The man is believed to be incarcerated in a Middle East prison.
Since 2019, seven men and three women have been charged with foreign incursion and terrorism-related offences.
A further two women (Kawsar Abbas and Zeinab Ahmad) have been charged with crimes against humanity and slavery offences relating to alleged incidents while in Syria.
Ms Elhouli was detained by Kurdish forces in March 2019 and held with other family members in the al-Hawl Internally Displaced Persons camp.
Earlier this month, Ms Abbas and her daughter Zeinab Ahmad were charged with crimes against humanity offences and accused of owning Yazidi slaves.
In Sydney, Janai Safar was arrested and charged with terrorism-related offences.
The latest revelations come as six women returned to Australia this week, amid violent outbursts in Melbourne.
None of those six women were charged.
Only one woman, Hodan Abby, was not allowed to come to Australia after the government issued her with a Temporary Exclusion Order (TEO).
Her young daughter, who suffers from shrapnel wounds, had not returned either, despite having a plane ticket.
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation/another-isislinked-australian-charged-with-terror-offences/news-story/a9d5d8513bba975267216497890098a9
https://www.afp.gov.au/news-centre/media-release/victoria-jctt-charge-female-returnee-terrorism-offences
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d0bc64 No.24653745
>>24621731
>>24648559
>>24649852
AFP defends Roberts-Smith arrest as media leak probed
Kat Wong - 28 May 2026
The Australian Federal Police has defended its prosecution of the nation's most decorated living soldier as a media leak about his arrest comes under scrutiny.
Ben Roberts-Smith was charged with murdering or ordering the murders of five unarmed detainees while deployed in Afghanistan between 2009 and 2012, after he was sensationally arrested on the tarmac of Sydney Airport in April.
Following a flight from Brisbane, the Victoria Cross recipient was met by one media outlet's camera crew as AFP officers walked him off the plane.
No other media organisations were made aware of the arrest ahead of time.
The department responsible for investigating war crimes has asked the federal anti-corruption commission to probe the leak, and on Thursday, AFP Commissioner Krissy Barrett backed the decision.
"I am not just disappointed the media outlet was there, but I am determined to find out how they knew of the arrest," she told Senate estimates.
"This could be an unauthorised disclosure and in my view anyone who disclosed that information should face consequences.
"I have no evidence to suggest the AFP provided information to the media about the date or details of the arrest."
Other details of his arrest have been questioned by Liberal senator Michaelia Cash and One Nation senator Malcolm Roberts, who asked why he was arrested in front of his teenage daughters and why the AFP shared its official footage - which blurred Roberts-Smith's face - after the arrest.
Acknowledging the "legitimate interest" in the issue, Ms Barrett offered a comprehensive statement.
A joint war crimes investigation into members of the Australian Defence Force deployed to Afghanistan was first launched in December 2021.
The Sensitive Investigations Oversight Board on March 31 proposed charging Roberts-Smith and on April 1 it received consent from Attorney-General Michelle Rowland, which led to the 47-year-old's arrest on April 7.
He was taken into custody at Sydney Airport due to operational reasons, the commissioner said.
The sterile environment at an airport, where people are screened and the area is contained, makes it safer for members of the public and for AFP officers to take action.
There were reports Roberts-Smith had offered to present himself to police, but this was "unviable" due in part to the seriousness of his charges, Ms Barrett said.
The AFP also makes footage available to the media to officially document an arrest and offer a source of truth in an era of misinformation.
"We take an oath that we will faithfully and diligently carry out our duties without fear or favour, without affection or ill will," Ms Barrett said.
"The Australian public can know the AFP will determine cases on the evidence in front of us, and not because of name, fame, or background of any individual, and that is the right thing to do."
The former SAS soldier has promised to use the upcoming trial to clear his name.
https://au.news.yahoo.com/afp-defends-roberts-smith-arrest-085136144.html
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d0bc64 No.24653755
>>24649835
Reuters executive Simon Robinson to replace Justin Stevens as ABC news director
Amanda Meade - 28 May 2026
1/2
The ABC has confirmed a top news executive from Reuters, Simon Robinson, has been appointed as news director of the ABC, after Guardian Australia revealed the surprise appointee on Thursday morning.
Robinson will join the ABC in September, four months after Justin Stevens resigned abruptly after four years in the role, citing personal and professional reasons.
Robinson said he grew up listening to and watching ABC News and he was delighted the role brought him home.
“As a passionate believer in the power of fact-based, independent journalism, I believe the ABC plays a pivotal role in providing Australians with the reliable reporting we all need,” Robinson said.
Stevens’ resignation on Wednesday was a shock and was effective immediately.
At Senate estimates on Thursday, the managing director of the ABC, Hugh Marks, refused to confirm or deny that he threatened to terminate Stevens if he didn’t resign.
Instead Marks revealed that he held a meeting with Stevens about a “very serious matter”.
He said he didn’t know where that information would have come from, given there were only two, possibly three, people at the meeting. “I don’t make threats, senator,” he said.
Senator Sarah Henderson asked if it was true that he had threatened to terminate Stevens if he didn’t resign.
Marks replied: “Senator, I think it’s inappropriate for me to go into the details of individual discussions with Mr Stevens, you know, about a very serious matter in this forum, but I think the outcome is Mr Stevens has resigned, and we will be in due course in [the] near future making an appointment.
Marks also strongly suggested the changing of the guard at the top of ABC News signalled a period of change at the broadcaster.
“It is an opportunity for us to move forward and look at a refreshed and rejuvenated output as we work out what you know the future of the ABC is,” Marks said.
Marks said Stevens, who had responsibility for 2,000 journalists across the country, felt it was time to move on and he did not push back on a suggestion by senator Sarah Henderson that Stevens was “encouraged to resign”.
“Stevens felt, you know, it was the right time for him to move on and pursue other careers, and I think it’s an opportunity, obviously, for the ABC to enter into a new phase of operations, where we look to, you know, refresh and rejuvenate our output for what might be, you know, the next 20 years to make sure that we’re fit for the future,” Marks told Senate estimates.
(continued)
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d0bc64 No.24653756
>>24653755
2/2
Marks was asked twice by senators to confirm Guardian Australia’s report that Robinson had been appointed.
Marks declined to confirm or deny the appointment and denied the ABC had leaked the story to Guardian Australia.
“I assume that speculation has led to someone trying to get the jump on the announcement. So [it was] good journalism.”
On Wednesday, Marks said Stevens had made an “incredible commitment” to the ABC over 19 years, including ensuring ABC News was the No 1 digital news provider.
“I am grateful to have seen the strength of Justin’s editorial instincts and to have observed his commitment to the ABC and audiences,” Marks said. “I wish him every success in the future.”
Robinson began his career at Time Inc in Sydney as a factchecker on Who Weekly and went overseas where he forged a career with Time as a correspondent, bureau chief and editor.
He has been at Reuters for 16 years and is currently deputy to the editor in chief of the 2,600 strong newsroom.
Two sources with knowledge of the appointment told Guardian Australia Robinson had been at Ultimo recently and the ABC chair, Kim Williams, was a big fan.
It’s understood Williams knew Robinson from his time as chairman of the Thomson Reuters Founders Share Company board.
Williams retired as chairman of the independent body tasked with preserving the news agency’s independence in January.
Robinson says in his biography on LinkedIn that he helps shape Reuters’ editorial vision: “I can reshape a news story or transform an organisation alike. I have been a correspondent, news editor, and investigative editor. I have years of experience as a newsroom leader and working on strategy. As the Deputy to Reuters Editor-in-Chief, I help manage a newsroom of 2,600 professionals and spearhead our digital and publishing initiatives which help shape news seen by billions of people around the world every day.”
In a farewell email to staff on Wednesday, Stevens said: “There is no more complex news organisation in the country, no more scrutinised institution, and few so laden with public expectations.
“In that context, I have sought to strengthen and defend our journalism without being blind to our stumbles; to meet the state of constant change in the digital age; and to improve our culture in News to one where we hold ourselves to the same standards as we do of others in the broader community.”
https://www.theguardian.com/media/2026/may/28/simon-robinson-expected-abc-news-director
https://www.abc.net.au/news/2026-05-28/abc-appoints-simon-robinson-as-news-director/106729310
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d0bc64 No.24653770
>>24648021
>>24649775
>>24649780
Southern Jackaroo 26: Japan, US, and Australia Begin Live-Fire Drills
Huang Hsin-wei - 2026-05-25
Japan's Ground Self-Defense Force (JGSDF) announced on May 22 that it will participate in a multilateral live-fire exercise called "Southern Jackaroo 26" alongside United States and Australian military forces, as part of efforts to uphold and reinforce a free and open Indo-Pacific.
The exercise is scheduled to run from May 29 to July 3, 2026, and will be held at the Townsville Field Training Area in Queensland, Australia, among other locations. The stated objectives include enhancing operational and combat capabilities, as well as strengthening interoperability with American and Australian forces.
Lieutenant General Makoto Endo, Commander of the JGSDF's Middle Army, will serve as the commanding officer representing the Japanese side. Participating units include the 7th Infantry Regiment, the Middle Army Artillery Regiment, and the Middle Army Intelligence Unit.
On the American side, the Marine Rotational Force-Darwin and the U.S. Army's 11th Airborne Division will take part. Australia will contribute the 3rd Brigade of the Australian Army. All three nations' forces will conduct joint live exercises together throughout the training period.
The exercise reflects growing trilateral defenseJapan's Ground Self-Defense Force will deploy alongside American and Australian troops for a major live-fire exercise in Queensland next week, the latest sign of deepening trilateral military cooperation in the Indo-Pacific.
Running from May 29 to July 3 at the Townsville Field Training Area, Southern Jackaroo 26 is designed to sharpen combat readiness and strengthen interoperability among the three allies. The JGSDF announced the exercise on May 22, citing its commitment to upholding a "free and open Indo-Pacific."
Forces on the Ground
Japan's contingent will be led by Lieutenant General Makoto Endo, Commander of the Middle Army. Deployed units include the 7th Infantry Regiment, the Middle Army Artillery Regiment, and the Middle Army Intelligence Unit — a combined-arms lineup that goes well beyond symbolic participation.
The United States will contribute the Marine Rotational Force-Darwin and the Army's 11th Airborne Division. Australia's 3rd Brigade rounds out the trilateral force. All three contingents will conduct joint live-fire drills throughout the five-week exercise.
Why It Matters
Southern Jackaroo has become an annual proving ground for Japan-US-Australia ground force integration, and the 2026 edition reflects how seriously all three nations are investing in that relationship. For Japan, deploying artillery and intelligence units thousands of kilometres from its home islands is a concrete expression of its broader push to expand military readiness and alliance coordination across the region.
With Indo-Pacific security remaining a pressing concern, exercises like this one send a clear signal — to allies and adversaries alike — about the reach and resolve of the trilateral partnership.
https://world.storm.mg/articles/1135052
https://qresear.ch/?q=Southern+Jackaroo
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d0bc64 No.24653826
Accused paedophile Joshua Dale Brown to admit childcare crimes, court hears
Erin Pearson - May 28, 2026
Accused childcare rapist Joshua Dale Brown is set to admit responsibility for his crimes, as the lawyers for both sides flag they will seek the assistance of a County Court judge to determine which of his 156 charges will proceed.
Brown, 27, faced Melbourne Magistrates’ Court remotely from custody at Barwon Prison, where he is being held in the Banksia Unit, a specialised management and protection unit within the jail. He is facing more than a hundred charges, including sexually penetrating multiple children he was employed to care for.
Defence barrister Rishi Nathwani, KC, told the court his client, who appeared sporting a blond ponytail and green tracksuit, accepted “quite a significant amount of the offending”.
The issue that remained, he said, was how the charges would be presented. Nathwani said he’d been in constant contact with the prosecution, who agreed the parties needed the assistance of a higher court.
Brown then pleaded not guilty – as a technicality, Nathwani said – to 156 charges.
“He will enter not guilty pleas, really as holding pleas in the circumstances,” Nathwani said.
“You can take it from me, I saw Mr Brown last Monday, that he’s aware of all the charges.
“What I can say is that while Mr Brown accepts quite a significant amount of the offending, the issue appears to be what that means in terms of the charges concerned.”
Crown prosecutor Michael Stanton, SC, agreed that discussions between legal counsel had been exhausted, with three new charges filed and six recently withdrawn.
Brown stands accused of abusing multiple children during his work at four daycare centres in Melbourne’s west, including one he worked at weeks after graduating from high school.
In May 2025, police discovered a cache of child abuse material allegedly linked to Brown, which sparked an urgent police investigation and plunged Australia’s childcare sector into crisis.
At the time it emerged that Brown had worked at 24 centres across Melbourne over more than eight years.
Brown is charged with offences including abusing eight children at Point Cook daycare Creative Garden between April 2022 and January 2023. Police also allege he sent child abuse material to another man while recording himself contaminating children’s food with bodily fluids.
This prompted unprecedented testing for sexually transmitted infections for kids at affected centres.
Brown is also facing charges of bestiality offences, not related to childcare.
Magistrate Donna Bakos noted the plea and directed Brown face a directions hearing in the County Court of Victoria on June 23.
She also noted there was no application for bail made.
https://www.theage.com.au/national/victoria/accused-paedophile-joshua-brown-to-admit-childcare-crimes-court-hears-20260528-p601pf.html
https://qresear.ch/?q=Joshua+Dale+Brown
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d0bc64 No.24653832
YouTube embed. Click thumbnail to play.
Childcare predator Ashley Paul Griffith appeals his life sentence, claiming it is ‘manifestly excessive’
MARCUS DE BLONK SMITH - 28 May 2026
One of Australia’s worst childcare predators has claimed his life sentence for raping dozens of children was “manifestly excessive” after pleading guilty, in an appeal in Queensland’s highest court.
Ashley Paul Griffith was sentenced to life in prison with a non-parole period of 27 years in 2024, after he pleaded guilty to more than 300 child abuse charges that spanned two decades across Queensland, NSW and Pisa, Italy.
The former Brisbane childcare worker lodged an appeal against his sentence in December 2024.
On Thursday, his lawyer, Sarah Cartledge, acknowledged his “truly awful” crimes as she sought leave to appeal. “The applicant preyed upon our most vulnerable, utilising a position of trust repeatedly,” she said.
But she claimed his 27-year sentence was “manifestly excessive” for “two core reasons: one, it does not reflect the significant mitigation present in this case; and two, it does not reflect consistency in sentencing having regard to other cases … involving heinous offences against children.”
Ms Cartledge said while it was appropriate that Griffith was handed “the highest head sentence that he ever could”, it failed to account for his “extensive” co-operation since his arrest and the 18 hours of police interviews.
“During those interviews, the applicant advised the police (those) allegations were true,” she said. “He walked officers through his employment history. He described where the offending occurred … and when the police had questions and needed more information, he elaborated on that.
“That is a lot of co-operation - 15 interviews with police from the day of his arrest is significant.”
The prosecution, led by Ruth O’Gorman, said his sentence was not manifestly excessive.
She argued that his misconduct had caused an “erosion of trust” within the community, “especially for parents who … require daycare centres to provide care for their young, vulnerable children”.
“That erosion of trust is a realistic matter, and had to be requested in the sentence,” Ms O’Gorman said. “And so we point to the erosion of trust and the need to bolster some of that erosion as supporting, in this case, the lengthy non-parole period that was imposed here.”
Ms O’Gorman said Griffith’s lack of remorse, lengthy offending period and the fact he deliberately worked in environments “where he could have access to children” meant community protection loomed large in the sentence.
“The applicant did engineer his employment situation such that he worked continuously over that 20-year period in daycare centres, knowing he had the interest in children,” she said.
Griffith’s “high risk of reoffending because of his pedophilic disorder” further justified the sentence imposed, Ms O’Gorman told the court.
In sentencing Griffith to life in prison in 2024, the judge said the seriousness and gravity of the charges warranted the maximum penalty. “The offending happened over a lengthy period,” Justice Smith said. “It involved many victims, many of (whom) were very young and very vulnerable. There were many rapes. There was a significant breach of trust.”
The court reserved its decision.
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation/childcare-predator-appeals-his-life-sentence-claiming-it-is-manifestly-excessive/news-story/1eccd957d155d075f6aeaa4f79739333
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IgAT039hNPk
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d0bc64 No.24653835
YouTube embed. Click thumbnail to play.
>>24653832
Notorious paedophile Ashley Paul Griffith fights 'excessive' life sentence
Robyn Wuth - May 28, 2026
One of Australia's worst paedophiles, childcare worker Ashley Paul Griffith, has launched a bid to slash the life sentence he received for abusing dozens of young children.
Lawyers for the notorious predator today argued in the Queensland Court of Appeal that the 27-year non-parole period he was handed in 2024 was "manifestly excessive" as they sought leave to appeal.
Griffith is behind bars after a horrifying history of abuse stretching almost two decades was exposed.
He pleaded guilty to 307 child sex offences against 65 victims aged between one and nine.
It included 28 counts of rape against girls, mainly aged three to five, at Queensland childcare centres between 2007 and 2022.
Griffith used his trusted role to prey on toddlers and preschoolers as they slept or by taking them into isolated corners of childcare centres, often while their parents believed they were safe in his care.
In court, his legal team claimed the sentencing judge went too far, insisting the case could have been dealt with by a fixed term of 25 to 30 years with a much shorter non-parole period.
Barrister Sarah Cartledge conceded Griffith's crimes were "truly awful" and that he had preyed upon "the most vulnerable" while in a position of trust.
The appeal is tightly focused on the parole eligibility date, with the defence arguing that while a life sentence was open, the minimum term effectively imposed a harsher punishment than in similar cases of extreme child sex offending.
Cartledge said Griffith had co-operated fully and openly since his arrest, giving around 18 hours of interviews.
"This was not a case where the court had to drag the truth from him at trial," she said.
"His extensive co-operation and guilty plea saved an enormous amount of court time and spared child complainants from giving evidence.
"The co-operation here went well beyond what this court usually sees … he didn't just admit the allegations put to him — he volunteered further instances of abuse and helped police piece together who some of the children were."
Justice John Bond, presiding on the appeal panel, suggested it was more accurate to view the sentence as a judicial determination that Griffith should serve no less than 27 years.
He pressed counsel on the broader impact of his offending, suggesting the harm extended well beyond his victims.
"These crimes do not end with the children and their families," Justice Bond said.
"They corrode trust in childcare institutions, they wound the people who worked alongside this man, and they burden those who had to investigate and respond to his offending.
"The harm accumulated over nearly 20 years must factor into the sentence."
Throughout two decades of preying on children, Griffith filmed all but one of his victims, building a vast cache of abuse he shared online.
When detectives raided his Gold Coast home in 2022, they seized more than 4000 child abuse images and videos documenting much of his offending.
Prosecutors, led by Ruth O'Gorman KC for the Director of Public Prosecutions, urged the court to reject the appeal, saying the sentence barely reflected the scale and cruelty of the crimes.
"When you weigh the gravity of this offending, the number of victims and the deliberate way it was carried out over nearly 20 years, it cannot seriously be said that this sentence is excessive," O'Gorman submitted.
"It is a strong sentence, but it is a justified one."
She said psychiatric evidence showed Griffith would pose a danger of reoffending if released too soon.
Griffith is also wanted in NSW, where he is the subject of an arrest warrant over alleged child sexual offences during his time working there between 2014 and 2018.
The case prompted a wide-ranging review of Queensland's childcare system, which found repeated red flags and warning signs were raised but ignored.
The appeal court has reserved its decision.
https://www.9news.com.au/national/notorious-paedophile-ashley-paul-griffith-fights-life-sentence/81d12f2e-d903-4cf2-a1be-617d615e91ff
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Dohl1Kfaqho
https://qresear.ch/?q=Ashley+Paul+Griffith
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d0bc64 No.24656415
>>24628997
>>24636287
Greg Moriarty makes the case for deepening the US alliance
JOE KELLY - May 27, 2026
The Australian Embassy in Washington has launched a video introducing Greg Moriarty as the nation’s new top diplomat stationed in Donald Trump’s America after he presented his credentials to the US President last week.
In the short two minute video clip, Mr Moriarty – who takes over the post from former Labor prime minister Kevin Rudd – underlined the value of the US alliance relationship with Australia and flexed his own professional credentials.
Mr Moriarty highlighted the transformational potential of the AUKUS security partnership, the Australian contributions to the US defence industrial base, the work being done with America to build secure rare earth supply chains and the massive capital being invested into the US through Australian superannuation funds.
He argued the partnership with Washington was “evolving faster than ever” and referenced his own career experience in the Department of Defence and as a top diplomat where he worked with “many great Americans.”
While negotiations continue to bring Donald Trump’s war against Iran to a satisfactory conclusion, Mr Moriarty noted that he had previously been attached to the headquarters of US Central Command in the Persian Gulf during the First Gulf War some 35 years ago.
He also noted his knowledge of Iran by referencing his time serving as Australian ambassador in Tehran from 2005-2008.
This experience led him to become one of the few Australian public servants to have ever advised a US president, with Mr Moriarty providing a briefing to George W Bush on the country.
While Mr Moriarty did not mention this in the short clip posted by the embassy, he noted that he had served as Australia’s top diplomat in both Iran and Indonesia where he “worked closely with my US counterparts on critical international security issues.”
“And most recently as Secretary of the Department of Defence, I supported the development and implementation of AUKUS and the direction of modern military ties between our two great nations,” he said.
“Today, our partnership is evolving faster than ever. Under AUKUS – a seismic shift in our shared defence capabilities – Australia is delivering a three billion investment into the US submarine industrial base,” he said.
“Our $8.5bn critical minerals framework lays the groundwork for the secure supply of rare earths the US needs to power the future,” he said. “Australian investment in the United States is at record levels thanks in large part to Australia’s pension funds which are supercharging their US investments and helping to build jobs, infrastructure and deliver growth right across the country.”
Mr Moriarty said that Australia’s work on AI and Quantum was also significant and would benefit both nations.
“In America’s 250th year, it’s an honour to make a contribution to advancing the partnership between Australia and the United States as I lead the Australian embassy in Washington.”
Mr Moriarty will take up his post at the same time as the United States moves forward with its own ambassador to Australia after Mr Trump selected David Brat for the role.
Speaking last week, Dr Brat said that he loved “everything” about Australia – including its people – and made clear he would closely follow the government of Anthony Albanese once he took up his post in the nation’s capital.
He stressed that few countries were more important to US interests than Australia and expected the alliance relationship to deepen over time, arguing that Mr Trump and Mr Albanese had used their White House meeting in October to “take the alliance to new heights.”
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/world/greg-moriarty-makes-the-case-for-deepening-the-us-alliance/news-story/6a45fc6b1171d8af25a9c7f82c148b50
https://x.com/AusAmbUSA/status/2059374704725467399
https://x.com/AusAmbUSA/status/2059273447524471001
https://archive.vn/4OWXq#24170674
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d0bc64 No.24656491
YouTube embed. Click thumbnail to play.
BBC management ‘knew Rolf Harris was a problem’ but protected star presenter
In a searing new documentary, the television giant has been damned for choosing millions in revenue over child safety by shielding the disgraced artist from consequences.
JACQUELIN MAGNAY - May 26, 2026
1/2
The BBC has been accused of providing convicted child sex abuser Rolf Harris with “bulletproof glass” protection, despite knowing of his propensity to sexually assault women, so the organisation could continue to make money off him in his role as a famous and well-loved television personality.
One British journalist said it had been so well-known about Harris’s shocking behaviour toward women that they were warned not to be alone with him and not to walk ahead of him up stairs.
It has also been alleged that one girl, then aged “barely 14”, had gone to the police in Australia to make a report about Harris’s behaviour in 1984, but she says her complaints were not taken seriously.
In a two-part series, “Rolf Harris: Primetime Predator”, on ABC, the woman, Nina, said she had made an official report to NSW police about Harris, who had been groping her, including playing with her breasts while reciting a nursery rhyme while she was in a hotel dining room.
“I went straight to the police and tried to report Rolf Harris, and I sat down with two male officers and they were not interested, they were looking at their watch and yawning,’’ she said on the documentary.
“It makes me really angry that by not taking it seriously; dismissing it and disregarding it, this behaviour has escalated, it’s continued and he has repeated it over and over again with children and all of those children have been damaged by him.
“Police could have addressed that in 1984 and they just didn’t choose to.”
NSW police have been unable to find any record of Nina’s correspondence and have encouraged all victims of sexual abuse to come forward.
Harris, the superstar presenter and artist, was convicted in the UK of child sexual abuse of four girls and women between 1969 and the 1980s, and sentenced to five years and nine months in jail in 2014. He was released in 2017 and died at his riverside home in Bray in May 2023, aged 93.
Executive-produced by four-time Emmy award-winning producer Karina Holden and Oscar nominee John Smithson, and directed by Nick Sweeney, the documentary marks the most comprehensive reckoning yet with Harris’s decades of abuse, bringing together survivors who have never previously spoken publicly. Tracing his rise from suburban Perth to the pinnacle of British entertainment, early promotions for the investigation claim to map the pattern of predation that ran beneath his celebrity his entire career.
(continued)
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d0bc64 No.24656501
>>24656491
2/2
British investigative journalist Meirion Jones, who exposed Harris’s colleague, fellow national children’s superstar Jimmy Savile, as a notorious pedophile, said that his wife, on her first day working at BBC studios, was warned about Harris.
“My wife was working at the BBC and her first day somebody senior came up to her and said ‘Rolf Harris is working here on his painting series. Do not get in a lift with him on your own. Do not walk upstairs in front of him. It is mainly the younger women he targets but do not take any risks’,” Jones said.
“Management knew that Rolf Harris was in the habit of groping and that he was a problem, and they were trying to transfer that problem to the people around him, saying to women ‘don’t put yourself in a position where he might attack you’.
“I think there was a very simple equation there. You have got top talent who can bring in millions of viewers who are worth a fortune to the BBC. There has always been bulletproof glass protecting them and it’s BBC management that have put that bulletproof glass in place.”
The documentary details the awful experiences of several of Harris’s victims, which were documented in two London court cases and reveal that the Metropolitan Police was gobsmacked during Harris’s appearance in the witness box during his first trial.
Ben Markham, a Met Police detective inspector who questioned “an arrogant” Harris when he was first arrested, said Harris revealed new information when he was on the stand in Southwark Crown Court.
One example was when he was meeting Victim A, a friend of his daughter, Bindi Harris, and he admitted she had performed oral sex on him along the towpath at the back of his waterside home in Bray, outside London, an open area where anyone could have seen.
Harris had also detailed how Victim A pleasured him while he sat under a blanket on a sofa while Bindi was sitting unknowingly on the other side of him.
“You are thinking ‘what are you saying?’,” Inspector Markham said.
“The jury was absolutely horrified, that story he told was a turning point for the jury.”
The documentary highlights that while some British victims of Harris obtained justice, the police in Australia had not laid any charges against him. This is despite some Australian victims being used by UK authorities as extra witnesses to bolster their case by showing a clear pattern across the two countries in the way Harris would go about his abuse.
Rolf Harris: Primetime Predator premieres on ABC iView at 8.30pm AEST, Tuesday, June 9.
https://iview.abc.net.au/show/rolf-harris-primetime-predator
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/culture/bbc-management-knew-rolf-harris-was-a-problem-but-protected-star-presenter/news-story/9545a9af273efa071addb5b5a5225038
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QcTOr7ur1Yo
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d0bc64 No.24656677
>>24656491
ABC documentary gives Rolf Harris’ Australian accusers a chance to be heard
Paul Kalina - MAY 28, 2026
1/2
“You have shown no remorse for your crimes at all. Your reputation now lies in ruins, you have been stripped of your honours but you have no one to blame but yourself.”
With those damning words, a British judge in 2014 sentenced Rolf Harris on 12 counts of indecent assault. The offences were committed against four women between 1969 and 1986. The victims were between eight and 19 years of age.
Before his spectacular fall, Harris was one of the most renowned, popular and successful entertainers to grace the stage, TVs and music business in both his native Australia and adopted homeland, England.
One of the four complainants at Harris’ trial, Tonya Lee, was a 14-year-old Australian touring London with a theatre troupe when she was assaulted by Harris in 1986. But the claims of many of Harris’ victims never went to trial. He was never charged in Australia, despite many of the offences, including those of the principal complainant in the British trial (who remains known only as victim “C”), having taken place here. Since his death in 2023, more victims have come forward.
“Here in Australia, the women never really had their day,” says Karina Holden, executive producer of the new two-part ABC documentary Rolf Harris: Primetime Predator.
Now in their 50s and 60s, these women grew up with guilt, shame and broken trust.
“To bring them back into the room again to talk about that inciting incident, you can’t take that lightly,” Holden says. “There has to be a sense of catharsis, of healing. Hopefully, when you’re talking about people who haven’t necessarily had their day in court and haven’t had their crimes against them acknowledged, hopefully there is that sense of healing that comes from at least telling their story in a respectful way, and giving them the space to do so.”
Surrounded at the time by adults, the women experienced the ultimate betrayal. “I think that for young people who haven’t formed their own sexual identity and sense of relationships, there’s also the question of, ‘What did I do to bring this on myself?’” Holden says. “Some of the women tried to tell people around them, [but] they weren’t believed. I think that this is just far too common, that abuse happens to young people and children who haven’t learnt about standing up for themselves.”
As well as giving voice to victims, the documentary paints a chilling picture of how Harris used his celebrity – a combination of eccentric stage routines, silly songs, larrikinism, folksiness and fawning reverence for the British establishment – to mask his crimes all the while in full public view.
Some of the most incriminating evidence that would be used in court came from Harris himself. In Primetime Predator, archival footage of Harris is reframed to draw attention to the striking contradiction between his public persona and what was happening only barely off-stage. In one of many cringe-inducing and re-contextualised clips that we see here, Harris is on-stage with a group of children when he makes a throwaway remark commending a young girl’s lipstick.
“It’s all there in plain sight in the archive, and even the way that he tells his own story,” Holden says. (Hiding in Plain Sight is the title of a 2024 ITV documentary about Harris.)
And then there is the public awareness campaign for child protection that Harris fronted (yes, you read that right) in the 1980s.
“At the same time as he was actively abusing children, he was the public face of child protection campaigns in the Antipodes,” Holden says. “It was just ridiculous to think that he’s telling children how to say no and is actually taking advantage of [them]. It’s shocking, and I think that spoke very powerfully to why this particular person made it a worthy documentary subject to really look at.”
(continued)
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d0bc64 No.24656684
>>24656677
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Holden’s involvement in the documentary began about four years ago, shortly before Harris’ death. Even then, the project was risky, as under Australian law a person can sue for defamation even if they’ve been convicted of similar crimes.
After his death, there were still tricky legal issues to deal with, such as implications of complicity or people not wanting their footage to be used because of the association that can be made.
Holden believes that following the #MeToo and Believe Women movements, the entertainment industry is bound by more stringent rules, child protection laws and greater awareness of unacceptable behaviour.
“I do think, while telling the story of one celebrity doesn’t address a larger problem within society, it still draws attention that perhaps when we look at this it will remind us, it will teach us, it will make us reflect, and it will make us more vigilant to keep these situations out of our schools, out of our homes, out of the more plain places that people may exist today, where they may be taken advantage of, and children may be unsafe.”
But Holden admits that she struggles to understand the contradictory way in which Harris implicated himself in his own wrongdoing.
“Here’s this man who is in a position of power, who is playing with young people who have this trust in him, acting as if he’s some kind of trusting avuncular character,” she says. “It’s a very uncomfortable set of circumstances for these women who are stepping forward and feeling like they’re with someone who they look up to, who then takes them into a dark place.
“He’s doing that because he thinks it’s funny, or he thinks he’s powerful, I can’t explain the psychology of that. I think that comes from a place that I could never understand. All I can do is think about what that must feel like for those women who are especially young and feeling vulnerable in that moment.”
Rolf Harris: Primetime Predator airs at 8.30pm on Tuesday, June 9 on ABC and ABC iview.
https://iview.abc.net.au/show/rolf-harris-primetime-predator
If you or anyone you know needs support, you can contact the National Sexual Assault, Domestic and Family Violence Counselling Service at 1800RESPECT (1800 737 732), Lifeline (13 11 14), the Suicide Call Back Service (1300 659 467), Beyond Blue (1300 22 4636) and Kids Helpline (1800 55 1800).
https://www.1800respect.org.au/
https://www.lifeline.org.au/
https://www.suicidecallbackservice.org.au/
https://www.beyondblue.org.au/
https://www.kidshelpline.com.au/
https://www.theage.com.au/culture/tv-and-radio/abc-documentary-gives-rolf-harris-australian-accusers-a-chance-to-be-heard-20260525-p600d4.html
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d0bc64 No.24659794
>>24643186
>>24648147
Government confirms bid to hide counter-terror details from royal commission
Matthew Knott - May 29, 2026
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Prime Minister Anthony Albanese’s department has sought to block royal commissioner Virginia Bell from considering whether the government directed intelligence agencies to reduce counter-terrorism resources in the lead-up to the Bondi massacre, a senior minister has confirmed.
ASIO officials told a Senate estimates hearing on Thursday night that they had not sought to prevent the royal commission from accessing the relevant material, backing up a written statement by ASIO Director-General Mike Burgess to the royal commission.
Burgess said in his statement that the Commonwealth had made several public interest immunity (PII) claims to block public release of documents, including a cabinet memorandum.
Asked about the matter on Thursday night, Environment Minister Murray Watt said the Department of Prime Minister and Cabinet had made a public interest immunity claim regarding cabinet documents.
“All I can say is that the PII claim was made by the Commonwealth on advice from Prime Minister and Cabinet Department to protect cabinet process, but of course the royal commissioner makes the final decision on all PII claims,” he told Liberal senator Jonno Duniam.
“Indeed, and as you would know, cabinet confidentiality is not exactly a new concept.”
Asked whether ASIO had sought a public interest immunity claim relating to the cabinet deliberations, senior ASIO official Lisa Alonso Love said: “No, I’m not aware that ASIO has asked for that.”
Burgess did not appear at Thursday’s hearings because he was ill.
On Friday, Watt denied that the move to block the release of cabinet documents undermined the purpose of the royal commission, and said the government was “actively supporting” the inquiry.
“It has been a longstanding convention that governments do not need to reveal cabinet discussions to royal commissions,” Watt told reporters in Canberra.
“But the royal commissioner is totally within her rights to reject the public interest immunity claim that the government has made, and that will be a decision that she makes going forward.”
In a written statement to the royal commission, first reported by The Australian Financial Review this week, Burgess wrote: “I understand this [classified] question as asking whether a decision was made, or a direction issued, by those bodies or people in that period, that either ASIO or the [national intelligence community] as a whole are to reduce [counter-terrorism] efforts to service other priorities.
“I am informed that the Commonwealth intends to assert public interest immunity in relation to whether cabinet or the National Security Committee of cabinet made a decision or issued a direction of that kind.”
Duniam demanded the government release the documents to the royal commission, accusing it of using public interest immunity protections “as a shield from political embarrassment”.
“I cannot see how who made the decision relating to funding and resourcing of intelligence agencies is something that should be held back from consideration by the royal commissioner,” Duniam told Sky News on Friday.
(continued)
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d0bc64 No.24659798
>>24659794
2/2
Former Home Affairs secretary Mike Pezzullo said Bell should reject the public immunity claim.
“I can’t see the basis for withholding information from the commission. I do, of course, think that ultimately in the public version of her report, there’s going to have to be discretion exercised,” he said.
A spokeswoman for the Royal Commission on Antisemitism and Social Cohesion said on Thursday that public interest immunity may apply if material would “reveal the confidential deliberations of cabinet”.
“If public interest immunity applies, the material is not able to be given to the royal commission,” she told the Australian Financial Review.
However, Bell would be able to inspect the material for the purpose of deciding whether to support or reject the public interest immunity claim.
Attorney-General Michelle Rowland said at a press conference she would have to check who sought to block the documents, adding that “some of this information is highly sensitive”.
Bell’s interim report, released last month, stated that the proportion of funding allocated to counter-terrorism “significantly declined” across national intelligence community agencies from 2020 to 2025, even as overall funding increased.
Albanese has refused to be drawn on this finding, and told SBS last month: “The report makes it clear that there was no inadequacy when it comes to preventing terrorist acts as a result of government agencies. So, it makes that very clear in the report.”
Burgess told the royal commission in an appearance on Monday that ASIO had made a pivot to investigating foreign interference and espionage when this supplanted terrorism as the nation’s top national security threat in 2022.
“In retrospect, I still think that our resourcing was sufficient for the problems we face,” he said.
“Of course, we are stretched, and I do have a means by which I can ask for additional resources if we need to.”
http://archive.today/Mjxpo
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d0bc64 No.24659807
YouTube embed. Click thumbnail to play.
>>24643186
>>24648147
>>24659794
Attorney-general defends blocking counterterror documents from Bondi royal commission
Tom Lowrey - 29 May 2026
Attorney-General Michelle Rowland has defended moves by the government to block the public release of cabinet documents relating to counterterrorism funding.
The federal government has made a public interest immunity claim over the documents before the Royal Commission into Antisemitism and Social Cohesion, essentially arguing it is not in the public interest for the documents to be released.
The royal commission has been looking into decisions made around resourcing for counterterrorism in the years leading up to the Bondi terror attack in December.
Cabinet documents are rarely made public, and the government argues it is simply following that ordinary process of keeping them secret.
Ms Rowland said there was nothing unusual going on.
"There is nothing that the Commonwealth is doing that is novel in terms of there being cabinet confidentiality," she said.
But the government does have the discretion to release the documents if it wishes.
In a written submission to the royal commission, the director-general of domestic spy agency ASIO, Mike Burgess, refers to the documents the government is seeking to keep secret.
His answers to questions on cabinet considerations are redacted within the documents.
But he does make clear that ASIO was not asked by the government to shift resources away from counterterrorism.
"ASIO was not directed by any minister between January 1, 2023 and November 2025 to reduce [counterterror] efforts to service other priorities," he said.
"I am not aware of any such decision or direction by any minister to any [intelligence] agency."
Ms Rowland said the government was following typical procedures, and the final decision rested with commissioner Virginia Bell.
If Commissioner Bell decides to uphold the public interest immunity claim, she cannot consider the information contained within the documents in her findings.
"It's a well established legal principle that cabinet documents and information of that nature attract public interest immunity in legal proceedings and royal commissions, but it's important also to note that decisions about whether to disclose cabinet information are ultimately a matter for the commissioner," she said.
"Commissioner Bell can see this information and can release it, she has the authority to do so and if it's determined to be in the public interest then that is the case."
The government has repeatedly insisted that Australia's national security agencies, including ASIO, have had funding increases since Labor came to office in 2022.
Shadow Home Affairs Minister Jonathon Duniam argued the government should drop the public interest immunity claim in the interest of transparency.
"The royal commission must be able to examine the full range of information and chain of decisions around counterterrorism funding, including what ministers and cabinet knew and what actions they did or didn't take," he said.
"This looks far less about protecting the public interest than about hectically protecting the government from scrutiny."
https://www.abc.net.au/news/2026-05-29/government-defends-hiding-documents-bondi-royal-commission/106736718
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z3x1_fwj0h4
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d0bc64 No.24659895
>>24526195 (pb)
>>24531154 (pb)
>>24599858
Aussie kids being radicalised ‘within days’ according to the top cop Krissy Barrett as online extremism surges
Australian children are being radicalised ‘within days’, according to the nation’s top cop who said urging tech giants to step up will be the primary focus of next month’s high-level police summit in the UK.
Caitlyn Rintoul - 29 May 2026
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Australian children are being radicalised “within days” as online extremism and exploitation surges, according to the nation’s top cop.
So alarmed by the worsening situation — Krissy Barrett will work with international partners at a high-level police summit in the UK next month to urge tech giants to step up.
The Australian Federal Police Commissioner said an accelerating speed and scale of radicalisation would be a key priority for the Five Eyes Law Enforcement Group annual meeting — involving counterparts from the US, UK, Canada and New Zealand.
It comes as she painted a picture of deteriorating online landscape during a Senate Estimates hearing on Tuesday night — increasingly filled with extremism, terrorism, child exploitation, sadistic digital abuse — where crime is borderless and commercialised.
“Where it used to take months or years to radicalise a person, in some cases, it’s happening in days,” Ms Barrett said.
“The speed and scale of radicalisation is becoming one of our more significant challenges especially when it comes to young people.
“We are seeing that across the world. A lot of our law enforcement colleagues, particularly our Five Eyes colleagues but indeed right across the globe are challenged by the same significant concerns,” she said.
“So much so that when I travel to the UK next month for the Five Eyes Law Enforcement Group annual heads meeting there will be a focus at that meeting on vulnerable communities — specifically young people and how we build an alliance with big tech companies to use AI and other emerging tech to combat these challenges.
“As we all know the tech companies have a big responsibility here. So, we will be working with the tech companies in terms of what they can bring to the table to assist use to protect young people.”
Australia has allocated $74 million over the next two years to establish a national Counter Terrorism Online Centre on home soil.
“It will also provide an early warning system for our counter terrorism teams about hate groups and individuals who are using online platforms to enlist or commit violence,” Ms Barrett said.
AFP Deputy Commissioner National Security Investigations Hilda Sirec said the centre will help agencies triage threats and enhance coordination between jurisdictions to disrupt and intervene early.
She describe it as an “evolving threat” with “more people seeking to advocate hatred fear and violence online”.
“This threat is materialised through terrorists and violent extremist using social media, gaming platforms, online forums, and dark webs to recruit and radicalise others to plan violent acts and build capabilities to executive those acts,” Ms Sirec said.
“We’re seeing online areas as being grievance-filled, where people — children particularity — are being desensitised to graphic material they’re seeing.
“We’re seeing private chat groups on social media act as echo chambers and channels for radicalisation and promotion of violence.
“Of particular concern as the commissioner mentioned is the growing number of young people being targeted and manipulated by violent extremist and terrorists.”
Ms Sirec also revealed 32 people had been charged with violent extremism material offences by Australia’s joint counter-terrorism team — of which 19 were aged between 17 and 13.
Greens Senator David Shoebridge also questioned Home Affairs over funding the department received for tackling online radicalisation of young people and why it wasn’t doing more to clamp down dangerous algorithms.
He said young Aussies were increasingly “offered up the menu of hate”.
(continued)
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d0bc64 No.24659898
>>24659895
2/2
Counter terrorism coordinator Brendan Dowling said the government was working to introduce Digital Duty of Care to “raise the expectation” on tech giants but acknowledged users were often “one or two clicks away” from extremism.
“I think what is demonstrable is that a person engaging in what might not be prima facie extremist or violent material is often only one of two clicks away from access to much more heinous material,” he told a hearing on Wednesday.
“I think there are obviously a multitude of behaviours or characteristics that we see online. There may be people who are seeking out this material and I think your average internet literate young person will not find it difficult to find quite alarming extremist material.
“But I also think our concern goes to the ease at which you can go from a site on what we would call the clear web or the main-stream internet and sometimes unwittingly find yourself access much more extremist material.”
Home Affairs official Hamish Hansford highlighted the department’s efforts to list White Australia and Hizb ut-Tahrir to Australia’s list of prohibited hate groups, under the Combatting Anti-Semitism, Hate and Extremism Act 2026.
Ms Barrett also raised the work of the National Security Investigations at the hearings — a specialised unit which launched in October 2025 to tackle increasing hate crimes and threats to high-office holders.
She said the team had been “incredibly busy” in the eight months of operations, with 41 people charged with Commonwealth offences — with 29 directly related to threats to parliamentarians and high-officer holders.
Ms Sirec said a dozen of the individuals were charged with anti-Semitic conduct, which has skyrocketed in Australia in since the Gaza war.
While the specialised unit has a presence in Sydney, Melbourne and Canberra — Ms Sirec said the AFP was working to expand it to Western Australia and Queensland next.
It was one of several Senate Estimates hearings this week to detail what the government was doing to combat the rising issue of anti-Semitism, especially in the wake of the Bondi Beach terror attack at a Hanukkah festival.
Australia’s Special Envoy on anti-Semitism Jillian Segal also appeared before Senators and described a protest outside Sydney Opera House in the days after the October 7 Hamas attack as a “critical moment” for the issue.
Ms Segal said the October 9 protest was “clearly a moment where there was hatred expressed to the Jewish community” and nations could taken a “different trajectory” if it had been dealt with differently.
“If it had been stopped and people had said ‘this is unacceptable’, and the police instead of protecting those protesters had indeed taken them, even if not arresting them, but asked them to move on,” Ms Segal.
“If there had been a completely different policing approach, I do think it would have sent a very different message and possibly a different trajectory.”
She also called out broadcasters SBS and ABC for not adopting her recommended International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance definition of anti-Semitism.
Ms Segal said their approach was “obviously not consistent with what I have recommended” for the IHRA definition — which has been endorsed by the Federal and State Governments and adopted by the Royal Commission.
The special envoy also told hearings that she expected a “significant” number of public servants would undertake dedicated anti-Semitism training.
https://thenightly.com.au/australia/aussie-kids-being-radicalised-within-days-according-to-the-nations-top-cop-as-online-extremism-surges-c-22354961
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d0bc64 No.24659921
>>24556912 (pb)
>>24577984 (pb)
>>24643186
1996 gun reform architect slams ‘spineless’ leaders as national buyback collapses
LACHLAN LEEMING - 29 May 2026
One of the driving forces behind gun reforms actioned in John Howard’s 1996 buyback has criticised the “glacial pace” of Anthony Albanese’s 2026 version, as NSW faces being the only state participating in the scheme.
Simon Chapman, who as co-convener of the Coalition for Gun Control in the 1990s championed legal changes including a buyback and banning semiautomatic weapons, also claimed state leaders were showing a “lack of political spine” after Premier Jacinta Allan this week confirmed Victoria wouldn’t join in on the key reform.
Mr Chapman said former Nationals leader Tim Fischer, who as deputy prime minister strongly supported Mr Howard on the 1996 buyback, would be “turning in his grave to see this spinelessness and backsliding”.
NSW Premier Chris Minns this week said he was prepared to “go ahead alone” as the only state committed to the reform announced by Mr Albanese in the days after the Bondi terror attack.
The Premier said discussions on funding for the scheme were still under way with the commonwealth. “We need help from the ‘feds’ here,” he said.
“If we have to go ahead alone on gun law reform in NSW, we will go alone – we’re going to be the only state with the toughest laws when it comes to firearms in the country.”
His remarks followed Ms Allan becoming the latest state leader to ditch the buyback, after announcing on Monday that Victoria wouldn’t participate.
Mr Chapman lashed the withdrawal of Victoria, which comes amid concerns within state Labor that a cap on gun ownership could hurt the party in regional and outer-suburban seats at the election later this year.
“There’s a lack of political spine – people are putting their electoral positions in critical electorates ahead of the national interest,” Mr Chapman said.
He added there was “absolute unity” among political parties during the 1996 buyback – with prime minister Mr Howard backed by his Nationals deputy, Mr Fischer.
“Tim Fischer would be turning in his grave to see this spinelessness and backsliding going on,” Mr Chapman said.
He added the “the glacial pace” of implementing the buyback had also hindered keeping the states on board.
“(In 1996) it was all done and dusted within about 10 days of the Port Arthur shooting,” he said.
Ms Allan on Monday confirmed Victoria wouldn’t pursue the buyback, with state Police Minister Anthony Carbines saying: “The government is not engaging in caps, and so the government won’t be engaging in the buyback scheme as it sits currently through the commonwealth.”
Ms Allan on Monday defended the position, saying she was “just not necessarily convinced that caps is the way to go”.
She said the state would instead focus on evil actors and criminals “who get their hands on a single gun”.
While her state will implement other measures, including a citizenship requirement for gun owners and tighter licensing requirements, the rejection leaves the Albanese government’s plans for a wider buyback in tatters.
Contacted about Victoria’s stance and slow commonwealth progress on the scheme, a federal government spokeswoman said the responsibility was on the jurisdictions over whether they would try to clamp down on gun ownership.
“It’s for states and territories to justify to Australians if they intend to stand in the way of getting those guns off our streets,” she said.
“All governments should be working to help to keep Australians safe.
“National cabinet agreed to strengthen gun laws across the nation … We anticipate the buyback scheme will lead to a significant reduction in the number of firearms within our community.”
Victoria joins Queensland and the Northern Territory in rejecting the national buyback.
South Australia has also signalled it won’t change its gun laws.
Western Australia completed its own buyback earlier this year while Tasmania has cobbled together its own scheme.
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation/1996-gun-reform-architect-slams-spineless-leaders-as-national-buyback-collapses/news-story/9967fc2b1c33d5d40142507e3a528f06
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d0bc64 No.24659938
YouTube embed. Click thumbnail to play.
‘We are the patriot party’: Taylor sets up Albanese fight after Abbott’s Liberal rallying cry
James Massola and Daniella White - May 29, 2026
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Angus Taylor will issue a rallying cry to a shattered Liberal Party and accuse Anthony Albanese seven times in the one speech of lying to Australians about tax hikes, a day after Tony Abbott declared the party was in an existential crisis and needed to be Australia’s “patriot party”.
Abbott, elected unopposed as president on the first day of the Liberal Party’s federal council meeting in Melbourne, said he had returned to public life because “I owe the Liberal Party big time, and that’s why I regard it as my duty to serve the party in this time of existential crisis”.
“As the last successful federal leader of the opposition, I do believe that I have the ability to help Angus Taylor to be the next successful federal leader of the opposition and to become our 32nd prime minister,” Abbott said.
“We are the freedom party, the tradition party, but above all else, we are the patriot party, which is why, at our best, we should be absolutely unbeatable.”
The former prime minister, who has long been a mentor to Taylor, is widely considered to have been one of the most effective opposition leaders in Australian history, though his prime ministership ended after less than two years amid a protracted slump in the polls and a divisive 2014 budget.
He is seen by some within the Liberals as a divisive figure, and his ascent to the presidency – the most senior position in the organisational wing of the party – is a boost for the conservative faction and another sign of the stranglehold the group has over future direction.
Abbott was visibly emotional as he spoke, lamenting the fact the party would be “lucky to have 50,000 members around the country” and pointing out the Canadian conservative party had about 400,000 members.
He took a swipe at the Labor government for breaking promises not to change capital gains or negative gearing taxes and employed a series of three-word slogans strikingly similar to those he used while opposition leader more than a decade ago.
“Angus has declared an agenda for our country to stop the toxic taxes, to end mass migration, and put Australia first, to abolish net zero, and to permanently restrain big government by indexing forever the tax thresholds,” he said.
The fierce speech from the former prime minister comes against the backdrop of the Coalition securing the primary-vote support of just 23 per cent of Australians in the most Recent Political Monitor, trailing Labor on 29 per cent and One Nation on 24 per cent.
Abbott also re-ignited the culture war over Australia’s national flag – both Abbott and former leader Peter Dutton refused to stand in front of the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander flags, along with the Australian flag, at certain official events – and lashed Albanese for his “inability to stand in front of just one national flag, an inability to acknowledge that this country belongs to all Australians equally”.
(continued)
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d0bc64 No.24659939
>>24659938
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Some Liberal MPs are concerned about Abbott’s elevation to the presidency, given his frequent and sometimes controversial interventions into public debate. One moderate MP, who asked not to be named so they could speak freely, suggested that Abbott’s outspokenness could create major headaches for Taylor.
But a conservative MP, who also asked not to be named, welcomed Abbott’s election and hoped the former prime minister would continue to make “muscular” contributions to public debate.
“Tony is looking to support Gus, and his election also sends a message to One Nation voters that maybe we are getting our act together at last.”
Taylor will tell the council meeting on Saturday, according to speech extracts provided to this masthead, that party members must to do everything they could to defeat the “socialist” prime minister and declared the Coalition was the only party that could remove the Labor government from power – a thinly veiled reference to One Nation.
“Labor has opened a battlefield [over tax] that it’s already regretting. Anthony Albanese has started a war on aspiration. A war on the very essence of being Australian. A war on the soul of our nation … we’re going to fight like hell and win this war. We’re going to fight like hell and defeat this rotten Labor government,” Taylor will say, in a speech that echoed both Abbott’s style and his criticism of the Albanese government.
The federal opposition leader accused Albanese of broken promises after the government introduced changes to capital gains tax and negative gearing in the budget, vowed to end the “mass migration” allowed by Labor and highlighted the opposition’s plan to index income tax rates, which would end bracket creep and give more money back to taxpayers.
“The justifiable public backlash to this budget is of a magnitude unlike any I have seen. Already, the prime minister is talking about carve-outs. But carve-outs aren’t enough. Labor’s toxic taxes need an axe.
“We will give Australians a bigger tax cut without the tax increases. Jim Chalmers has given the game away. When the treasurer says indexation will cost ‘a quarter of a trillion dollars over the decade’, that’s the figure he wants to steal from Australians through bracket creep. Jim is planning to take $250 billion extra in income tax from Australians.”
https://www.theage.com.au/politics/federal/we-are-the-patriot-party-taylor-sets-up-albanese-fight-after-abbott-s-liberal-rallying-cry-20260529-p601wx.html
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iRaUyp6He6g
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d0bc64 No.24660443
>>24579005 (pb)
>>24579031 (pb)
>>24579051 (pb)
Regulators asked to investigate ACON’s gender clinic despite ties with the trans lobby group
STEPHEN RICE - May 29, 2026
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Australia’s most powerful transgender lobby group, ACON, runs a gender clinic in Sydney that systematically hides potentially life-threatening medical risks from patients in its advertising, complaints filed with the national health and corporate regulators allege.
The Kaleido Health Centre, which provides gender-affirming hormone therapy and surgical referrals to transgender patients – including children – operates as a trading name of ACON Health Centre and has the same chief executive officer and chair/president as the trans advocacy group.
The clinic, largely funded by the NSW government, engages in false and misleading advertising, according to detailed compliance audits conducted by child protection and advocacy group Active Watchful Waiting Inc.
Kaleido acknowledges it treats patients aged under 18 only on a hidden Q&A page not accessible via the main navigation menu, the complaints say, but the clinic provides no information on the website about parental consent requirements, minor-specific assessment protocols or age-differentiated risks.
The audits allege the clinic violates Australian Consumer Law and the Health Practitioner Regulation National Law by prominently advertising gender-affirming medical interventions without disclosing any of the known material risks.
But both the government watchdogs tasked with investigating potential breaches, the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission and the Australian Health Practitioner Regulation Agency, have signed up to partnerships with ACON, which aggressively promotes gender-affirming medical treatment for minors.
Kaleido Health Centre’s website describes its GP-led hormone therapies and surgical referral pathways as “safe”, “high-quality” and “evidence-based”. However, the audit found no public disclosure of severe risks such as venous thromboembolism, stroke, cardiovascular disease, irreversible physical changes and permanent infertility.
The Kaleido clinic’s website page stating it treats under-18s was accessible via the main navigation menu until February 2025 but has since been moved off the menu.
The clinic claims it is “a separate entity to ACON, with its own CEO and board of directors”, but more than a year after the clinic opened lists ACON CEO Michael Woodhouse as “interim CEO” and ACON president Justin Koonin as chair of the board.
The audits on the clinic were run by AWW executive director Catherine Anderson-Karena, a qualified Association of Software Testing compliance analyst.
“This is a textbook case of misleading by omission,” Ms Anderson-Karena told The Australian. “The website prominently advertises services as ‘safe’, ‘evidence-based’ and ‘high-quality’ – but doesn’t tell consumers about blood clots, cardiovascular risks, fertility impacts, or that many effects are permanent and irreversible”.
Kaleido’s unqualified claims of “evidence-based care” omit any reference to ongoing medical debates and independent international reviews – such as the UK’s Cass Review – that have found the evidence for youth gender medicine to be remarkably weak, she said.
“We’re not asking regulators to take a position on gender medicine,” Ms Anderson-Karena said. “We’re asking them to enforce the same informed consent transparency standards they’d enforce for any medical service offering irreversible interventions to minors.”
A former ACCC lawyer who reviewed the audits, but asked not to be identified, told The Australian there appeared to be clear breaches of consumer law by Kaleido and that, under the legislation, conduct only had to be “likely” to mislead or deceive.
“Parents will be going to these websites who are confused about what’s happening to their children, and they’ll be using them as an important source of information at a very difficult time,” the lawyer said. “When you’re talking about adolescents and young people, it’s not just the patient who’s going to be looking at that information, it’s crucial for parents trying to understand what their child is getting involved with.”
(continued)
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d0bc64 No.24660448
>>24660443
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The complaints come against the backdrop of growing disquiet over ACON’s reach into federal and state health agencies through its Australian Workplace Equality Index, Pride in Health+Wellbeing programs and LGBTQ+ Inclusion awards.
As investigations by The Australian have revealed, the group’s radical trans agenda often spreads into the outward-facing operations and policies of those organisations.
Earlier this year the ABC withdrew from its association with ACON after The Australian revealed multiple instances where its editorial and programming operations had been influenced by the lobby group.
Both of the regulatory bodies now receiving the complaints against Kaleido Health Centre have institutional relationships with ACON.
The ACCC – Australia’s peak corporate regulator and consumer watchdog – has achieved “Bronze Tier Status” in ACON’s AWEI program and has declared it is aiming for Silver Tier Status by 2028.
AHPRA – the nation’s peak medical regulator – has partnered with ACON to guide “the way we regulate and fulfil our purpose of ensuring the preservation of public safety”.
AHPRA faces claims its links with ACON have influenced punitive actions against psychiatrists Andrew Amos and Jillian Spencer, who have opposed gender-affirming medical treatment for children and teenagers.
Kaleido claims its services align with the standards of care required by AusPATH, the controversial peak body for medical professionals involved in treatment of trans and gender-diverse people, but the AWW audits allege the clinic fails to provide the risk disclosures and fertility warnings AusPATH recommends.
Kaleido’s alleged failure to meet even the AusPATH standards is remarkable, given that AusPATH is promoted by trans activists as the standard-bearer for gender-affirming medical treatment in Australia.
ACON referred questions to the Kaleido clinic.
A spokesperson for Kaleido said its clinicians “discuss all risks with patients prior to getting consent and information on the Kaleido website does not, and should not, form part of the consent process. The place for discussions about risks, benefits and alternative treatment options is the consulting room, not a website.”
However, under AHPRA’s advertising framework, a medical website must be upfront about risks. It is not compliant merely because it avoids obvious falsehoods; it must avoid misleading overall impressions created by omission, selective evidence, minimised risks, testimonials or unsupported claims likely to influence healthcare decisions.
Ms Anderson-Karena says AWW has audited 16 gender clinics to date and all were rated “seriously deficient” on informed consent transparency, but the Kaleido case is particularly significant because if ACON – self-described as “Australia’s leading LGBTQ+ health organisation” – can’t meet basic standards, “what does that say about the rest of the sector?”.
A spokesperson for AHPRA said any regulatory action it took was based on the available evidence and the level of public safety risk, and rejected any suggestion that engaging with ACON created bias.
“Engaging with community groups is an important part of understanding community perspectives and supporting public safety,” the spokesperson said.
A spokesperson for the ACCC said it participated in ACON’s workplace benchmarking scheme to provide an inclusive and supportive workplace to all employees. “We do not consider this participation presents a conflict of interest in our consideration of any alleged breaches of the Australian Consumer Law by ACON or other parties.”
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation/regulators-asked-to-investigate-acons-clinic-despite-ties-with-the-trans-lobby-group/news-story/5d48e77af00e048c8b22c6dc2cc2945c
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d0bc64 No.24660459
Trump says Murdoch indicated he would 'handle' newspaper's Epstein story
abc.net.au - 29 May 2026
Donald Trump has refiled a $US10 billion ($14 billion) lawsuit against News Corporation's Wall Street Journal, claiming that Rupert Murdoch told him he would "handle" a story about Mr Trump's ties to Jeffrey Epstein.
The lawsuit is one of several the US president has brought in his personal capacity against news organisations, part of what critics say is a wider pressure campaign against the media.
Last month, a judge dismissed an earlier version of the lawsuit filed against the Journal over legal deficiencies but allowed Mr Trump to revise and refile.
Mr Trump's lawsuit alleges the Journal tarnished his reputation with an article describing a birthday card to deceased sex offender Epstein as bearing Mr Trump's signature.
Mr Trump and his lawyers said the card is fake. Politicians investigating Epstein's case later released a copy provided by his estate.
According to the amended lawsuit, Mr Trump called Mr Murdoch on July 15 after Journal reporters contacted the White House about the story.
"In response, Murdoch stated, 'I will handle it,' which President Trump reasonably interpreted as meaning that Murdoch believed President Trump, and that the article would not be published," the lawsuit says.
Representatives of Dow Jones, the Journal's parent company and a defendant in the lawsuit, did not immediately respond to a request for comment on the filing or on the allegation regarding Murdoch.
Dow Jones, which News Corp owns, has previously said it has full confidence in the Journal's reporting and will defend itself in court.
Mr Murdoch, who was born in Melbourne, is chairman emeritus of News Corp.
Epstein, the disgraced financier and sex offender, died in a New York jail cell in 2019 in what the city's chief medical examiner determined was a suicide.
The lawsuit, filed in federal court in Miami, names Mr Murdoch, Dow Jones, News Corp and its CEO, Robert Thomson, along with two Wall Street Journal reporters as defendants, saying they defamed Mr Trump and caused him to suffer "overwhelming" financial and reputational harm.
In throwing out Mr Trump's first lawsuit in April, US District Court Judge Darrin P. Gayles, an appointee of former President Barack Obama, said Mr Trump had not met the "actual malice" legal standard for public figures in defamation cases, which requires evidence that a defendant published a statement that they knew or should have known was false.
The US president has also filed defamation and other lawsuits against other media organisations, including the New York Times, the British Broadcasting Corporation and Iowa's Des Moines Register.
Those outlets have denied wrongdoing and are fighting the cases in court.
https://www.abc.net.au/news/2026-05-29/trump-says-murdoch-would-handle-epstein-story/106735742
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d0bc64 No.24660484
>>24611825
First ship in government’s long-awaited ‘strategic fleet’ revealed
Matthew Knott - May 28, 2026
The federal government has begun assembling a long-awaited strategic fleet of Australian-flagged and crewed vessels, starting with a 175 metre-long cargo ship that can be used to deliver essential supplies in times of crisis.
The maritime sector has been frustrated by a lack of action on Labor’s 2022 election pledge to create a strategic fleet of 12 merchant vessels, but the closure of the Strait of Hormuz due to the war in Iran this year has created a new sense of urgency.
The number of large Australian-flagged ships has dwindled to just nine – down from a peak of more than 100 large ships 50 years ago, according to peak body Maritime Industry Australia Limited.
A 2023 report prepared for the government found the precipitous decline in Australian commercial vessels meant the nation would have “great difficulty accessing and controlling the maritime assets that we might require” in times of emergency.
“This puts us in a dangerous position and needs to be reversed,” the report found.
Transport Minister Catherine King will announce on Friday that the government has signed a contract for container ship ANL Kokoda, which is 175 metres long and 27 metres wide, to be the first of three vessels in a pilot program for the strategic fleet.
Built in 2011, the ship has a maximum capacity of 23,000 metric tonnes and has a crew size of 36. It had previously been sailing under the Maltese flag.
The government still hopes to create a fleet of 12 privately owned and commercially operated ships that can be requisitioned in times of crisis, including natural disasters and supply chain disruptions.
King said the move marked an “incredible chapter in Australia’s maritime history” and would make the nation more resilient.
“Recent global events have emphasised the importance of Australia having a resilient domestic maritime sector,” she said.
“The ANL Kokoda will provide critical maritime capabilities, including by adding a new tool to be able to respond to disruption events.”
An estimated 99 per cent of Australia’s trade occurs via sea, and virtually all of this travels in foreign-flagged and owned vessels.
Australian-flagged and crewed ships are estimated to cost operators around $7 million a year more than foreign vessels, explaining the decline in the local industry.
Angela Gillham, chief executive of Maritime Industry Australia Limited, said the announcement “could not have come soon enough”.
“Our geography dictates that a strong sovereign maritime industry should be fundamental to the fabric of our economy,” she said.
“The strategic fleet is an appropriately strong response to the troubling decline in Australian maritime capability, which calls for urgent and aggressive policy action to turn the trajectory of the industry around.”
The idea is controversial. The Productivity Commission argued against a strategic fleet in 2023 on the grounds that there were cheaper alternatives to address skill shortages and supply chain disruptions.
Jim Wilson, policy manager at Shipping Australia, has argued that a strategic merchant fleet is bad policy and “the whole thing is going to fail because of its economics”.
Unions have been strong supporters of the idea as a way to improve pay and conditions for Australian workers.
International Transport Workers Federation President Paddy Crumlin, a former head of the militant Maritime Union of Australia, said the decision “puts shipping back, front and centre, in the national supply chain and the national psyche”.
“Shipping is the lifeblood of Australia’s social and economic wealth, but for too long we have been dependent on foreign multinational-owned and controlled ships that pay vulnerable workers slave wages to deliver it,” he said.
“Not only is this exploitative … it undermines our national security and supply chain sovereignty.”
Maritime executive Peter Court wrote in a piece for the Australian Strategic Policy Institute last year that “Australia lacks an Australian-controlled, internationally trading merchant shipping fleet”.
“This means we have no national capability to move essential fuel, food, medical supplies or military stores. In a crisis – be it conflict, global logistics breakdown, fuel disruption or natural disaster – we rely entirely on foreign-flagged vessels to move crucial imports and exports,” he wrote.
https://www.theage.com.au/politics/federal/first-ship-in-government-s-long-awaited-strategic-fleet-revealed-20260528-p601ot.html
https://www.defenceconnect.com.au/naval/18278-australia-announces-large-cargo-ship-anl-kokoda-as-first-vessel-in-maritime-strategic-fleet
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d0bc64 No.24660508
>>24512238 (pb)
>>24611802
Aussie Submarine sold to US: C2 Robotics commissions first US export Large Uncrewed Undersea Vehicle
c2robotics.com.au - May 1, 2026
C2 Robotics has today marked a significant milestone with the commissioning and christening of its Speartooth Large Uncrewed Undersea Vehicle (LUUV), the first to be delivered to the United States.
This ceremony represents a defining moment for the company, signalling both the transition of Speartooth from development, into operational service, and C2 Robotics’ expansion into international markets.
While ship christenings are a longstanding naval tradition, this event is a first for C2 Robotics and was conducted with a modern twist – as it was christened by a robotic arm, with a ‘Human-on the-loop’! A philosophy that extends to Speartooth’s operational context.
“This is a proud and important step for our company,” said Troy Duggan, CEO of C2 Robotics. “We don’t typically conduct christening ceremonies for all of our boats, but this moment reflects the maturity of the Speartooth program and the strength of our partnership with the United States.” “The LUUV program is incredibly fast paced with payload options and mission roles continuously expanding”, Duggan said.
The christening ceremony was officiated by Guest of Honour and Sponsor’s representative – Captain Josh Fagan – the US Naval Attache based in Canberra. Representing the Director General of Maritime Integrated Capabilities (who oversees the RAN’s autonomous systems program) was Captain Tony Miskelly RAN. C2 Robotics team members and suppliers were also in attendance.
The Speartooth LUUV has been designed to deliver scalable, cost-effective undersea capability across intelligence, surveillance, reconnaissance and strike missions. Its smaller size and lower unit cost enable it to operate in contested environments and generate force mass in ways that traditional platforms cannot.
“This partnership demonstrates a shared commitment to advancing allied autonomous undersea capability,” Duggan said. “Speartooth is built on the principle of ‘Small, Smart, Many’—and today’s event brings that concept one step closer to operational reality.”
C2 Robotics extends its sincere appreciation to CAPT Josh Fagan for supporting the ceremony and formally marking the entry of Speartooth into service with the United States.
A further announcement on overseas sales with our European partner, Eurobotics GmbH, will be released soon.
https://c2robotics.com.au/aussie-submarine-sold-to-us-c2-robotics-commissions-first-us-export-luuv/
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d0bc64 No.24660589
>>24611802
READOUT: Pacific Fleet Commander’s travel to Perth, Australia, May 25-27
U.S. Pacific Fleet Public Affairs - 28 May 2026
U.S. Navy Adm. Steve Koehler, commander, U.S. Pacific Fleet, visited Perth, Australia, May 25-27, 2026, to attend the Indian Ocean Defence & Security (IODS) 2026 Conference & Exhibition, Australia’s premier forum on defense and security in the Indian Ocean region designed to facilitate high-level engagement on shared regional challenges, capability development, and sovereign industry growth.
At IODS 2026, Koehler met with senior Australian defense and government officials and industry partners to reinforce the strength of the U.S.-Australia alliance, emphasize U.S. commitment to AUKUS, and to deepen ties with allies and partners to achieve a shared commitment to maintaining peace and security in the region.
During the conference, Koehler participated in a senior Naval leadership panel alongside Hammond and Vice Adm. Yasuhiro Kunimi, vice chief of staff, Japan Maritime Self-Defense Force. The leaders reflected on the strong partnership between the three nations, capability integration, and increased interoperability between allies and partners in the region which provides credible deterrence in the Indo-Pacific.
Koehler also visited the Royal Australian Navy base HMAS Stirling on Garden Island to tour the training, housing, and gym facilities. He also visited Kings Park to view a plaque given by U.S. Navy Adm. James D. Watkins, commander in chief, U.S. Pacific Fleet, in 1982 thanking the people of Western Australia for their hospitality over the many decades to the U.S. Navy.
Koehler’s visit to Australia reaffirmed the U.S. – Australia alliance remains a cornerstone for peace and prosperity in the Indo-Pacific. U.S. Pacific Fleet delivers combat-ready naval forces to defend the homeland and U.S. interests throughout the region, provide credible deterrence, and strengthen U.S. alliances and partnerships to ensure a secure and prosperous Indo-Pacific.
https://www.cpf.navy.mil/Newsroom/News/Article/4502366/readout-pacific-fleet-commanders-travel-to-perth-australia-may-25-27/
https://iods.com.au/
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d0bc64 No.24660647
>>24653770
U.S., Australia, Japan begin Exercise Southern Jackaroo 2026
1st Lt. Chase Fortier, Marine Rotational Force - Darwin - 29 May 2026
TOWNSVILLE, Australia – Exercise Southern Jackaroo 2026 officially commenced today following an opening ceremony that brought together forces from the United States, Australia, and Japan. Scheduled from May 29 to July 3, 2026, the exercise serves as a premier training venue to build a cohesive, multi-national force capable of operating seamlessly across the Indo-Pacific's complex environments.
Throughout the exercise, U.S. Marines and Sailors assigned to 1st Battalion, 5th Marine Regiment and Combat Logistics Battalion 5, both with Marine Rotational Force – Darwin 26, will work alongside the Australian Defence Force’s 3rd Brigade, as well as maneuver elements from the U.S. Army and Japan Self Defense Force.
The primary focus of this year's exercise is interoperability advancement. By actively aligning communications, tactics, and procedures during rigorous field training, participating nations are eliminating friction points and building a seamless allied force. This integration ensures that U.S., Australian and Japanese forces are ready to respond to regional challenges as a unified front in any future crisis.
In addition to interoperability, Southern Jackaroo 2026 is designed to test and prove combined arms integration. Participating forces will execute a demanding progression of training, including force-on-force offensive and defensive operations, mounted machine-gun gunnery, and mortar employment.
Through these coordinated live-fire attacks and mounted maneuvers, multinational forces will demonstrate their ability to synchronize fires, maneuver, and effects to achieve a distinct and decisive battlefield advantage. The exercise will culminate in a multi-national combined arms live-fire exercise.
"Exercise Southern Jackaroo enhances our collective capability by integrating U.S. Marines alongside our allies in realistic, demanding scenarios," said Lt. Col. Mark Saville, commanding officer of 1st Bn., 5th Marines. "By practicing how we communicate and work together on the ground, we ensure that our combined forces maintain a high state of combat readiness and a decisive tactical edge."
Exercise Southern Jackaroo 2026 brings together U.S. Marines, Sailors, and Soldiers, the Australian Defence Force and Japan Self Defense Force for a month-long, multi-national training event. The exercise focuses on advancing combined arms integration and tactical interoperability through rigorous live-fire scenarios, ensuring these allied militaries can operate seamlessly as a unified front across the Indo-Pacific.
https://www.pacom.mil/Media/News/News-Articles/Article/4504650/us-australia-japan-begin-exercise-southern-jackaroo-2026/
https://www.dvidshub.net/news/566384/us-australia-japan-begin-exercise-southern-jackaroo-2026
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d0bc64 No.24660738
>>24653770
Exercise Southern Jackaroo unites Australian, US and Japanese forces for drills
Australia’s largest onshore international military exercise has kicked off near Townsville, with 3000 troops from five nations training to fight together should conflict arise.
Evan Morgan - May 30, 2026
1/2
Five nations stood as one on a clear blue winter’s day for the opening ceremony for Exercise Southern Jackaroo 2026 at the Townsville Field Training Area, 80km southwest of Townsville yesterday.
This year is the largest iteration of the multilateral military training exercise which runs from this week through to July 3 with 3000 soldiers from the Australian Defence Force and personnel and partner nations, including the United States, Japan, the Republic of Korea, and Papua New Guinea.
Commander 1st (Australian) Division Major General Ash Collingburn said the joint interoperability exercise helped build a readiness between allied forces.
“Every patrol, every radio check, every ambush, every rehearsal, every hard day in the field, it all contributes to one outcome. A fighting force that can integrate, endure, and fight as one,” the Major General said.
“This is where we build trust. Trust in procedures, trust in capability, but above all, trust in each other as one team. That trust built here in training is what carries forward into crisis and conflict.”
The Major General said Exercise Southern Jackaroo would be the largest onshore international activity for the Australian Army this year.
“We’re bringing together more than 3,000 troops and a suite of the most modern military hardware that we have.”
He said the Townsville Field Training Area (TFTA) is one of the best training areas in the world.
“….We are able to use all of our different capabilities and engage targets at maximum range. We can operate in close country, we can operate in open country, and we can operate in urban terrain. So, it’s a perfect mix of the different environments where we may have to fight.
“The duration of the exercise is around three weeks and there’s a combination of dry fire activity or a manoeuvre exercise and we’ll conclude with a life fire exercise at the end.
“We are a fighting force that is preparing for war. And that requires rigorous training. And the great thing when we bring our international partners together is we are able to build interoperability and the key to interoperability is trust and confidence.
“When we exercise like this, we’re able to build trust and confidence in our capabilities, in our tactics, and most importantly, in our team, such that when we have to fight together, it is instinctive,” he said.
(continued)
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d0bc64 No.24660760
>>24660738
2/2
Japan Ground Self Defence Force, Colonel Soichi Yamazaki said there were 400 Japanese soldiers and 100 vehicles here for the exercise.
“Our training field in Japan is very limited, very narrow. On the other hand, the training environment in Australia is incredible,” he said.
“We can conduct the fire exercise in maximum range and we can use an unmanned aerial vehicles (UAV) without any limitation.”
United States Marine Corps Major Trevor Kerchner said Exercise Southern Jackaroo was important training exercise for his marines.
“We are to be able to build the interoperability with our partners here in Australia as well as the Japanese, Republic of South Korea and Papua New Guinea, as well as our joint partners with the US Army,” he said.
“There are two major objectives for us. I talked about interoperability first, but to break that down slightly more, increase technical interoperability as well as human operability and then gain a better appreciation for tactics, techniques, and procedures for our partner forces - They can learn from us and we can learn from them.”
https://www.townsvillebulletin.com.au/news/townsville/exercise-southern-jackaroo-unites-australian-us-and-japanese-forces-for-drills/news-story/92b603ce6a37b717ad5b477a5633dc71
https://www.facebook.com/WINNewsToowoomba/videos/the-australian-armys-largest-multinational-exercise-on-home-soil-for-this-year-i/3202046396633465/
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d0bc64 No.24662093
>>24653770
US, Japanese forces join Australian army’s largest military drills of the year
SETH ROBSON, STARS AND STRIPES - May 29, 2026
American soldiers and Marines helped kick off the largest Australian army exercise of the year alongside Japanese troops on Friday.
Southern Jackaroo is slated to run until July 3 at Townsville Training Ground in the eastern state of Queensland, according to U.S. and Japanese officials.
Marine Rotational Force-Darwin, the Alaska-based 11th Airborne Division, the Australian army’s Townsville-based 3rd Brigade and the Japan’s Middle Army are participating, according to the Japan Ground Self-Defense Force.
About 300 U.S. Marines are involved in the drill, along with 1,500 Australian troops and 400 from Japan, Capt. Kevin Hicks, a spokesman for the rotational Marines, said by email Friday.
The Marines will “conduct offensive and defensive operations, live-fire platoon attacks, small-arms/indirect-fire employment, and a capstone multi-national combined-arms live-fire exercise,” he said.
Southern Jackaroo “is the largest Australian Army exercise this year,” he said. A Jackaroo is an Australian ranch hand.
South Korean troops are also in Australia participating in Exercise Tiger Dingo, which runs concurrently with Southern Jackaroo, Hicks said.
U.S. forces are training for littoral combat, which means jungle warfare, Australian defense researcher Allan Orr told Stars and Stripes by email Friday.
“The only place in Australia that has a jungle environment is North Queensland,” he said of the area that encompasses Townsville.
There could be a reorientation of the American presence in Australia to Queensland now that the Marines’ footprint in Darwin has been accepted by Australians politically, Orr added.
The Japan Ground Self-Defense Force said Southern Jackaroo aims to maintain and strengthen a “free and open Indo-Pacific,” according to a May 22 news release.
Japanese forces will boost their combat capabilities and cooperation with U.S. and Australian forces during the drill, the release said.
Troops from the three nations trained together in September in Niigata, Kyoto, Hyogo, Chiba and Kanagawa prefectures on Japan’s main island of Honshu during the annual Orient Shield exercise.
A reciprocal access agreement that took effect in August 2023 allows Australian and Japanese forces to train in each other’s territory.
https://www.stripes.com/theaters/asia_pacific/2026-05-29/southern-jackaroo-australia-japan-21813787.html
https://www.dvidshub.net/image/9711320/southern-jackaroo-26-us-marines-soldiers-receive-mission-brief-australian-army
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d0bc64 No.24662191
>>24621731
>>24648559
>>24649852
>>24653745
Ben Roberts-Smith’s lawyer slams media leak as ‘serious breach’ of integrity
Aaron Patrick - 27 MAY 2026
1/2
A lawyer representing Ben Roberts-Smith called for the person or people responsible for leaking advance notice of the Victoria Cross recipient’s arrest last month to be identified and held responsible.
The National Anti-Corruption Commission confirmed it had received a complaint from the Office of the Special Investigator and Federal Police about the advance notice provided to journalists before the arrest of Ben Roberts-Smith on April 7.
The commission said the matter was under “active consideration” and commissioner and former war crimes investigator Paul Brereton would not be involved, avoiding another conflict-of-interest headache for the agency.
Criminal lawyer Karen Espiner welcomed the unusual referral by the two law-enforcement agencies, which have arrested two veterans of the Afghanistan war after investigations that have taken five years. Hundreds of millions were re-allocated from the Defence budget to the Office of the Special Investigator.
“The leak that allowed Nine journalists to be tipped off before Ben’s arrest represents a serious breach of protocol and integrity, and the commission must now fully investigate its origins and hold those responsible to account,” Ms Espiner said.
Nine reporters
Online data suggests that newspapers owned by the Nine media group may have prepared an article about the arrest of the famous ex-soldier the day before. Journalists and photographers from the company may have also been waiting for the arrest when Mr Roberts-Smith was detained at Sydney Airport after arriving with his partner and twin daughters on a shopping trip.
OSI Director-General Chris Moraitis said he called Attorney-General Michelle Rowland that morning to inform her of the impending arrest, which triggered blanket media coverage. When she didn’t answer, one of his staff called the minister’s office but did not disclose where the arrest would be taking place, he told a Senate committee Tuesday evening.
“We believe there is an unauthorised disclosure,” he said. “That’s a matter that concerns me. The media seems to have been privy to things and we’re taking steps to ascertain what happened there.
“We were aware of the media being present because we saw media on the morning around various places. It surprised me that happened because we have usually been pretty good on keeping a low profile.”
(continued)
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d0bc64 No.24662195
>>24662191
2/2
Major General Brereton, who plans to step down in July, oversaw the four-year investigation into allegations that prisoners were executed in Afghanistan by members of the special forces, including Mr Roberts-Smith, who was an SAS corporal.
Mr Roberts-Smith is a former executive at the Seven television network, which is part of the same company as The Nightly.
Ten war crimes investigations are still being pursued by the Office of the Special Investigator, Mr Moraitis said, although he would not say how many veterans are involved or how many interviews the agency has conducted since it was created five-and-a-half years ago.
The only other ex-soldier charged is Oliver Schulz, another SAS veteran.
Mr Moraitis told the senators he hoped the investigations would be finished soon because of the effect on those affected. “Soon can be anywhere between six months to a year and a half,” he said.
No arrest by appointment
Mr Roberts-Smith’s public arrest attracted criticism given his lawyers said he had offered to hand himself into authorities anywhere and at any time.
There has been speculation prosecutors preferred to try him on five counts of the war crime of murder in NSW rather than Queensland, where he lives.
The head of investigations at the Office of the Special Investigator, Ross Barnett, declined to explain why the arrest took place in NSW, citing a need not to prejudice the court case.
“In this particular case the operational planning process did not support the option of an arrest by appointment,” he said.
Prosecutors have said they suspected Mr Roberts-Smith was planning to emigrate from Australia when they arrested him in April on camera, an approach that triggered a public backlash.
“It was really about location — which was the most propitious location given all the circumstances to effect an arrest,” Mr Moraitis said. “If that’s strategic, it’s more tactical, I think, if I could use that distinction.”
Mr Roberts-Smith has been accused of executing and ordering the execution of five prisoners between 2009 and 2012. He has said he will plead not guilty.
Prosecutors have foreshadowed more charges in a case that has divided public opinion and been described as “the murder trial of the decade”.
https://thenightly.com.au/politics/ben-roberts-smiths-lawyer-slams-media-leak-as-serious-breach-of-integrity-c-22343828
https://thenightly.com.au/australia/ben-roberts-smith-digital-footprint-shows-federal-investigations-leaked-story-a-day-before-arrest–c-22125920
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d0bc64 No.24662277
>>24621731
>>24629058
Exclusive: BRS ‘zip ties’ contradict Defence claims
Prosecutors say their war crimes murder case against Ben Roberts-Smith includes images that appear to show slain Afghans were tied up before being killed.
Ben Mckelvey - May 30 – June 5, 2026
1/2
Evidence outlined in a prosecution summary of the war crimes case filed against Ben Robert-Smith challenges the Australian Defence Force’s longstanding position that officers and commanders could not have known about illegal killings in Afghanistan while they were happening.
The prosecution statement of its war crimes murder case presents eyewitness accounts, including at least five accounts of one killing at a compound known as Whiskey 108 in 2009.
More importantly, the prosecution says it will also be relying on official Defence imagery that was taken on the battlefield to ensure, among other things, adherence to legal conduct.
It says this imagery shows ligature marks on the wrists of the deceased Afghans, which the prosecution says is evidence the men were detained and zip-tied by Roberts-Smith or men in his patrol before being killed.
Evidence of zip-tying would be inconsistent with Roberts-Smith’s statements and official reporting. It would show that Defence should have been aware of potential war crimes as they were happening and, indeed, had imagery suggesting this.
Roberts-Smith has pleaded not guilty to the war crime murder charges and claims that he never breached the law during his service in Afghanistan. He will defend these allegations in court.
Special Air Service Regiment patrols were obliged when possible to take photographs of bodies after all engagements in Afghanistan, during a process called sensitive site exploitation (SSE).
These images were attached to after-action reports filed by SASR patrols and sent for review by legal officers attached to the Special Operations Task Group.
According to Dr Glenn Kolomeitz, an international humanitarian law consultant who served as a Special Operations Task Group legal officer in 2009, legal officers reviewing SSE imagery are required to do so by comparing them against the after-action reports. “This review should be quite forensic,” he says.
The prosecution summary says that SSE photography features as evidence in the case of the 2012 killing of Ali Jan in Darwan. It is alleged that Ben Roberts-Smith kicked Ali Jan off a cliff and then ordered another soldier to shoot him.
The summary says the SSE imagery shows injuries beyond the gunshot wounds as well as a “linear void of bloodstaining” on the arm of Ali Jan and linear marks “in keeping with the application of a ligature”.
Roberts-Smith has asserted his innocence in relation to this killing.
The prosecution statement also relies on SSE imagery as evidence for the two murder charges that Roberts-Smith faces over a raid undertaken in the village of Syachow in 2012.
According to official after-action reporting about the Syachow raid, Roberts-Smith and his patrol shot two men and threw a grenade at them after the men were seen “moving through a cornfield to gain a tactical advantage” and refused to stop after being told to do so.
The prosecution case is that both men were detained and interrogated by Roberts-Smith, who punched one of them, that both were lined up on the edge of the cornfield, and at least one was blindfolded and zip-tied before they were executed, after which the grenade was thrown at the bodies.
The prosecution says that imagery shows one man had injuries consistent with having been zip-tied before his death.
Roberts-Smith has asserted his innocence in relation to these killings.
The prosecution statement of evidence indicates that multiple images of slain men with ligature damage on their wrists were reviewed by Special Operations Task Group legal officers – military officers with legal qualifications and extensive training on the laws of armed conflict who were attached to special forces.
The 2016 direction of the chief of the defence force that ordered the inspector-general of the Australian Defence Force (IGADF) to undertake the investigation that would eventually result in the report by Paul Brereton specifically targeted legal officers and other officers who may have had access to after-action reports and SSE imagery.
Of five directives, one called for the IGADF to investigate the potential for there to have been a “systemic failure, including by commanders and legal officers at multiple levels within SOCOMD [Special Operations Command], to report or investigate the stories as required by Defence policies”.
(continued)
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d0bc64 No.24662281
>>24662277
2/2
A submission to Brereton from the provost marshal of the ADF, the officer leading the Joint Military Police Unit, which is the unified police agency of the ADF, was highly critical of legal officers attached to the Special Operations Task Group.
The submission went so far as to say that the provost marshal believed legal officers were “complicit in the concealment and/or fabrication of evidence”, which may be a crime.
The Brereton report said: “It is apparent that legal officers have contributed to the embellishment of operational reporting, so that it plainly demonstrated apparent compliance with ROE [rules of engagement].”
However, Brereton ultimately absolved the SOTG legal officers, adding: “It is not suggested that this was done with an intention to mislead, as distinct from to express in legal terms what the legal officer understood to have happened.”
This statement does not square with instances in which the legal officers and commanders saw ligature damage in SSE images that were part of after-action reports that did not mention prior detention.
It is possible that some legal officers and other officers looking at these images simply did not look for ligature damage, even in instances where reports of Afghans being zip-tied and then executed were available to them.
Abdul Ghafar Stanikzai, the head of the Afghan Independent Human Rights Council in Uruzgan in 2012, told The Saturday Paper he received multiple reports from eyewitnesses saying they had seen the SASR zip-tie villagers and that those men were found with gunshot wounds.
He says that despite the Australians being aware of some of these allegations, and his office having a pre-existing relationship with SOTG legal officers, no Australian contacted him about these reports contemporaneously.
It is possible some SOTG legal officers did not believe or investigate Afghan allegations of wrongdoing, relying only on Australian after-action reporting.
This is suggested by one rebuke of legal officers by Brereton, saying that they should remember that their client is “the Commonwealth, as distinct from the deployed force, its members or Commanding Officer” and that they should treat “civilian complaints impartially, rather than as if acting in defence of the deployed force”.
Professor Ben Saul, United Nations special rapporteur on the promotion and protection of human rights and fundamental freedoms while countering terrorism, told The Saturday Paper that under international humanitarian law “credible reports of possible war crimes must be promptly and thoroughly investigated, including by reference to all evidentiary materials, such as known photographs”.
Whether evidence of murder was seen or not, the prosecution statement asserts that it was available in at least 2012 to Australian officers whose job was to ensure legal conduct.
Yet it was only in 2017, after leaks from SOTG legal officer David McBride, and in 2018, when journalist Chris Masters reported on the Darwan raid in Fairfax (now Nine) newspapers – using the pseudonym Leonidas to refer to Ben Roberts-Smith – that it became widely known that illegal killings may have happened in Afghanistan.
Prosecution evidence has been collected by the Office of the Special Investigator, a statutory body whose past and future budget allocations total more than $350 million.
Before that, many tens of millions of dollars were spent on Brereton’s IGADF investigation, Dr Samantha Crompvoets’ sociological review and the defamation trial launched against the Nine newspapers.
The Australian Defence Force was contacted about this story but declined to comment.
Ben Mckelvey is the author of Find Fix Finish – From Tampa to Afghanistan: how Australia’s special forces became enmeshed in the US kill/capture program.
https://www.thesaturdaypaper.com.au/news/law-crime/2026/05/30/exclusive-brs-zip-ties-contradict-defence-claims
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d0bc64 No.24662516
>>24599875
>>24636207
Epstein victims ‘lack confidence in police needed to submit Andrew evidence’
Patrick Sawer - 29 May 2026
Victims of Jeffrey Epstein who claim to have evidence concerning Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor do not have enough confidence in the British police to come forward, according to a US lawyer.
Brad Edwards, who represents hundreds of Epstein’s victims, claimed to have “multiple clients” who have information about the former prince but are reluctant to speak to police because they lack faith in the investigation.
His clients include a woman who claims Epstein sent her to Britain to have sex with Mr Mountbatten-Windsor in 2010, when she was in her 20s.
Mr Mountbatten-Windsor has consistently and strenuously denied any wrongdoing.
The National Police Chiefs’ Council (NPCC) has said that people who come forward will be “treated with care, compassion and respect”.
However, Mr Edwards told the BBC: “Our multiple clients, plural, with information about [Mr Mountbatten-Windsor] will not speak with authorities in the UK for two reasons.
“First, the authorities did not care to do anything when Epstein was alive, so their confidence is low. Second, and most important, the harassment by the British press has dissuaded them from ever cooperating with UK authorities or speaking with the British press.”
The woman represented by Mr Edwards has made an allegation against Mr Mountbatten-Windsor regarding a purported encounter at Royal Lodge, then the former prince’s home, in 2010, before he had invited her to Buckingham Palace for tea.
Thames Valley Police confirmed in February that it would assess that claim.
She is the second woman to allege she was abused in the UK, following Virginia Giuffre’s claims that Epstein brought her to the UK in 2001 to have sex with Mr Mountbatten-Windsor.
Mr Edwards told the BBC that “more than one client” had initially been willing to co-operate with British police in relation to that allegation, but had been put off from doing so when UK-based journalists began investigating the woman and her family.
The lawyer said “other victims took notice” of the fact that speaking out had resulted in the woman’s privacy being threatened.
Thames Valley Police said it had engaged with the woman’s legal team, but that her lawyer had said she would not communicate with police over fears regarding her privacy. Mr Edwards confirmed that Thames Valley Police had been in contact with him.
Sexual misconduct claims to be assessed
The force said last week that its investigation into Mr Mountbatten-Windsor will assess claims of sexual misconduct as part of its ongoing inquiry into alleged misconduct in public office.
It is understood detectives are concerned that the public believes they are focused only on claims that the former prince leaked documents to Epstein, when the legal terms of the offence under investigation are much broader.
Sigrid McCawley, a US lawyer who represented Giuffre and is acting for other women whom Epstein may have trafficked to the UK, said she did not believe she had received any form of communication from the Metropolitan Police.
Giuffre, who took her own life last year, made a complaint to the Metropolitan Police in 2015. Officers interviewed her a number of times, but she was told there would not be an investigation.
Mr Mountbatten-Windsor settled for an estimated £12m in a civil case she brought against him in 2022. The settlement was made without admission of liability.
The former prince was arrested on Feb 19 and released under investigation on suspicion of misconduct in public office.
He has denied any personal gain from his role as a UK trade envoy between 2001 and 2011.
Epstein, who was convicted of soliciting prostitution from a minor in 2008, died in a New York prison in 2019 as he awaited trial on sex trafficking charges.
An NPCC spokesman said: “As part of the UK policing response, efforts have been made to contact victim-survivors who have already chosen to share their experiences publicly.
“In some cases, this has involved engagement with legal representatives; however, we recognise that we have not yet been able to reach everyone and our efforts continue.
“We understand that coming forward can be incredibly difficult, and we want anyone affected to know they can do so in their own time, when they feel ready. Our door remains open.
“Should any victim-survivors choose to contact UK policing, they will be treated with care, compassion and respect, with their well-being, privacy and right to anonymity at centre of our response.”
https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2026/05/29/epstein-victims-lack-confidence-in-police/
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d0bc64 No.24663222
YouTube embed. Click thumbnail to play.
Shangri-La Dialogue 2026: 'Where is China' ask delegates at Asian defence forum
Claire Fu and Xinghui Kok - May 30, 2026
SINGAPORE, May 30 (Reuters) - The big question hanging over this year's Shangri-La Dialogue, Asia's premier defence forum, is: "Where is China?"
For the second year running, Chinese Defence Minister Dong Jun has given the free-wheeling Singapore security meeting a miss, skipping opportunities to meet U.S. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth as well as counterparts from Australia, France, Britain, Japan and other nations.
In his place, Beijing sent a low-profile delegation of People's Liberation Army "experts and scholars" - a step down from the usual high-powered presence.
A highlight of the dialogue's annual programme has been a robust speech by China's defence minister or senior official laying out Beijing's defence doctrine and outlook on global tensions. But the speech helmed by China has been dropped from this year's programme, like in 2025.
Even Hegseth took note.
"I wish my counterpart was here at this conference, but I look forward to other options when we can cross paths and communicate, talk about things where often actions at sea or actions in the air are perceived differently," he said during his own keynote speech on Saturday.
Australia's Richard Marles called it a lost opportunity for countries to have frank, face-to-face talks on flashpoints.
Dong Jun however, did meet Hegseth during U.S. President Donald Trump's visit to China earlier this month.
Zhou Bo, a retired PLA senior colonel and a member of China's delegation to the meeting, downplayed his absence.
"This is not the first time the defence minister is not attending," he said. "And academic delegations have come before. But it is true that the level of the delegation is relatively low this time."
Some analysts point to a more calculated choice: avoiding questions like Taiwan tensions and the effect of military corruption purges on China's combat readiness.
"My feeling is that they are trying to avoid tough questions," said Chong Ja Ian, a political scientist at the National University of Singapore.
"The question that comes up with the (Chinese) delegation, since it is so researcher heavy, is their representativeness and authoritativeness."
HEGSETH'S COMMENTS ON CHINA THIS YEAR RESTRAINED
Diplomats said Beijing may also have wanted to avoid a repeat of last year's dialogue, when Hegseth described China as a threat in the Indo-Pacific and urged Asian allies to boost defence spending.
Beijing responded at the time by accusing the United States of vilifying China.
This year, Hegseth struck a more measured tone, although he cautioned that "no state, including China, can impose its hegemony and hold the security or prosperity of our nation and our allies in question".
He added that U.S.-China relations were better than they had been in many years.
China began sending a usually high-powered delegation to the 23-year-old event in 2007. It dispatched its defence minister in 2011 and again in 2019, and continued the practice from 2022 to 2024. The Shangri-La Dialogue was suspended in 2020 and 2021 due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
Bilahari Kausikan, a veteran Singapore diplomat, said the Shangri-La Dialogue was always primarily about anchoring the U.S. in Southeast Asia and ensuring its defense chief comes to Singapore and Southeast Asia at least once a year.
"Whether China is represented by its defence minister is a secondary factor. It would be nice but not essential to have the Chinese defence minister here.”
https://www.reuters.com/world/china/where-is-china-ask-delegates-asian-defence-forum-2026-05-30/
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q0kq2yVV7zU
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d0bc64 No.24663227
>>24663222
Hegseth praises Australia for ‘stepping up’ as he shifts tone on China
Lisa Visentin - May 30, 2026
1/2
Beijing: US Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth has rejected claims that weapons sales to Taiwan had been paused due to the Iran war, as he chided allies for not spending enough on their own defence while praising Australia for “stepping up”.
At the Shangri-la Dialogue in Singapore, Asia’s top defence summit, Hegseth also noted there was “rightful alarm” about Beijing’s military build-up and assured allies that America remained committed to ensuring China was not allowed to dominate the region.
But he said relations with China were better than they had been in years in a less strident speech than he gave last year, reflecting a broader shift in the Trump administration’s tone towards Beijing.
He scolded “free-riding” allies who he said were not carrying their weight by investing enough in their own defences, but singled out Australia along with other Asian partners, including South Korea, the Philippines, Singapore, Malaysia and Thailand, while taking aim at Europe.
“Australia is stepping up. Together, we are expanding the rotational presence of US forces and collaborating to ensure our defence industrial bases build and sustain weapons required for a high-end fight,” Hegseth told the room of top defence officials, diplomats and politicians.
“We appreciate Australia’s investment in real combat power and the commitment to integrate more deeply with the US joint force across South-East Asia.”
His comments will be welcomed by the Albanese government, which has pledged to invest an extra $53 billion in defence over the next decade – a figure that still falls short of Hegseth’s call for Australia to spend 3.5 per cent of GDP.
Hegseth did not mention Taiwan or Iran in his speech, only discussing them in response to questions in the Q&A section. On Iran, he noted “any deal will be a good deal” as negotiations with Tehran continue and said the US was ready to restart attacks if one couldn’t be reached.
He said there had been no change to US policy on Taiwan and no link should be made between US arms stockpiles and the Iran war. But his remarks will likely do little to assuage anxiety in Taiwan about Trump’s ongoing commitment to helping the democratic island defend itself as it waits on his decision to approve an estimated $US14 billion ($19.5 billion) arms package.
“On the Taiwan arms sales, I would very much decouple the two, and we feel very good about our stockpiles, both how we use them, and in Epic Fury in this historic moment,” Hegseth said, referring to the US military operation in Iran.
“Any decision about future Taiwan arm sales, as the president said, will rest with him.”
(continued)
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d0bc64 No.24663228
>>24663227
2/2
In contrast, Defence Minister Richard Marles drew attention to Taiwan in his speech, noting the island had five separate cases of seabed cable damage in 2025. Taipei regularly accuses China-linked vessels of sea cable sabotage, which Beijing rejects.
Without directly accusing China, Marles said the seabed was “becoming a battlefield” and called on Beijing to commit to transparency in its maritime operations.
“Existing patterns of grey zone activity are not consistent with a peaceful and stable regional order,” he said while appearing in a panel discussion at the summit on Saturday.
Speculation about the Taiwan weapon sales mounted after Trump revealed he discussed them in recent meetings in Beijing with Chinese leader Xi Jinping, who wants the US to scale back or delay its arms package, and has not ruled out using force to take control of the island.
Trump later described the arms sales as a “very good negotiating chip” with China.
Acting US Navy Secretary Hung Cao seeded further doubt when he told a congressional hearing on May 21 that the package had been paused “to make sure we have the munitions we need for Epic Fury” – a claim Hegseth directly repudiated on Saturday.
Under US law, Washington is required to provide Taiwan with the means to defend itself. White House officials have maintained that Trump has approved more weapons to Taiwan than any other president, including an $US11 billion package last year.
In his 2025 address, Hegseth adopted a more combative line on China, declaring the US had a renewed focus on deterring Beijing’s growing military might and warned it would “fight and win decisively” if it sought a conflict over Taiwan.
On Saturday, Hegseth asserted that the US would seek to secure peace and stability in the Indo-Pacific by being “strong, quiet and clear” while wielding a “big stick”.
“We share a clear-eyed assessment of that security environment and a mutual understanding that a Pacific dominated by any hegemon would unravel the regional balance of power and undermine the equilibrium we all seek to preserve,” he said.
Rory Medcalf, head of the National Security College at the Australian National University, said the shift in rhetoric was a noticeable departure from the past.
“On China, something had clearly changed: this was perhaps the least confronting speech from a US administration in the 23-year history of the Shangri-La Dialogue,” said Medcalf, who was attending the conference.
“To be sure, secretary Hegseth called for securing peace by preparing for war in the First Island Chain, which includes Taiwan. But he also extolled the recent Trump-Xi summit and placed great weight on US-China relations.
“The great uncertainty is whether this all reflects strength or vulnerability in the US negotiating position.”
https://www.theage.com.au/world/asia/hegseth-praises-australia-for-stepping-up-as-he-shifts-tone-on-china-20260530-p6025z.html
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d0bc64 No.24663242
YouTube embed. Click thumbnail to play.
>>24663222
Pete Hegseth tells Shangri-La Dialogue that US won't allow China to dominate Asia
Stephen Dziedzic - 30 May 2026
US Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth has declared that the Trump administration will not let China impose "hegemony" on the region, but has skirted any mention of Taiwan in a closely watched speech at Asia's premier defence summit.
Mr Hegseth, also known as the Secretary of War, is the highest-profile speaker at this year's Shangri-La Dialogue in Singapore, after China decided not to send its defence minister for the second year in a row.
He once again heaped pressure on allies in both Europe and Asia to spend more on defence, saying the US needed "partners not protectorates", declaring America would "speak softly" but "carry a big stick".
He boasted about the Trump administration's record US$1.5 trillion (A$2.085 trillion) defence budget request, saying it would "unleash America's arsenal of freedom and expand America's military dominance for decades to come".
The defence secretary also pointed to US efforts to bolster its military presence along the first island chain, the line of archipelagos stretching from Japan through Taiwan to the Philippines, stressing that Washington DC would not abandon Asia and would work with partners to create a "genuinely stable equilibrium" and a "favourable durable balance of power".
"A Pacific dominated by any hegemon would unravel the regional balance of power and undermine the equilibrium we all seek to preserve," Mr Hegseth said.
"The Department of War is working with the utmost focus to prevent any such unravelling."
Taiwan not mentioned in speech
Most officials, ministers and military at Shangri-La were most closely focused on what the secretary said on Taiwan in the wake of the summit between Donald Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping in Beijing earlier this month, and the stalled arms sales worth US$14 billion (A$19.5 billion) to Taiwan.
China has poured large amounts of energy into trying to prise the US away from Taiwan, and the Trump administration's recent moves have fuelled anxieties in Taiwan that US support could be ebbing.
Mr Hegseth did not directly mention Taiwan once in his speech to the conference, in stark contrast to his speech last year, when he warned against a potential Chinese invasion of the self-ruled island.
When asked about the arms sale, he denied that the US had held up sales because its stockpiles had been drained by the war in Iran, saying the administration felt "very good" about its stocks.
"Any decision about future Taiwan arms sales, as the president said, will rest with him and the nature of that relationship," he said.
He also said there was "no change" in America's overall position on Taiwan, although successive US administrations have refrained from using arms sales as a bargaining chip since Ronald Reagan issued the Six Assurances in 1982.
Meanwhile, Australia's Defence Minister Richard Marles used his speech to the Shangri-La Dialogue to warn about the risks to subsea cables in the wake of incidents that have damaged the critical arteries in both the Baltic Sea and the Taiwan Strait, with analysts pointing the finger at China and Russia as the likely culprits.
Mr Marles said it was "striking" that "several cables have been severed across the Baltic and the Taiwan Strait since November 2024", although he did not directly blame either Beijing or Moscow.
"Now, maybe these were accidents. But even if they were, it highlights the vulnerability of this crucial part of the globe's infrastructure," Mr Marles said.
"If they were intentional, we are left to wonder: Are countries testing our response times, testing our attribution thresholds and testing our political will to respond?"
His speech came in the wake of a sometimes pessimistic keynote speech to open the conference on Friday night by Vietnam's General Secretary of the Communist Party, Tô Lâm.
The Vietnamese top leader said the challenges facing the world included an erosion of international rules and law, a crisis of development models, including slowing growth and climate change, and a crisis of trust among nations.
He said the erosion of trust was a "silent, yet dangerous crisis" which fuelled mistrust and anxiety — sometimes further exacerbated by the rise of new technologies like AI.
https://www.abc.net.au/news/2026-05-30/pete-hegseth-us-will-prevent-china-hegemony-shangri-la-dialogue/106740596
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5xLIy4a9Ilc
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d0bc64 No.24663254
>>24663222
Attacks on subsea critical infrastructure at a scale unprecedented, says Marles
BEN PACKHAM - May 30, 2026
Defence Minister Richard Marles says a surge in damage to subsea cables has transformed the seabed into a “battlefield”, urging greater transparency from Beijing around its maritime operations and tighter international controls over “shadow fleet” vessels.
Mr Marles declared at the Shangri-La Dialogue on Singapore that internet cables, “the arteries of modern civilisation”, were being cut at an unprecedented rate, with Australia and the Indo-Pacific particularly vulnerable.
“Over the past 18 months, we have witnessed a series of attacks against subsea critical infrastructure at a scale and frequency that is historically unprecedented,” he told the annual strategic forum.
“The seabed is becoming a battlefield. The shadow fleet is becoming a weapon.”
Mr Marles pointed to five separate cases of cables being cut in the Taiwan Strait in the past 18 months, and three in the Baltic Sea, which have been attributed to China and Russia respectively.
“Maybe these were accidents. But even if they were, it highlights the vulnerability of this crucial part of the globe’s infrastructure,” he said.
“If they were intentional, we are left to wonder: are countries testing our response times, testing our attribution thresholds and testing our political will to respond?”
Mr Marles called on Beijing, which has a huge shadow fleet, to come clean on its activities at sea.
“A commitment to transparency around its maritime operations would be a meaningful contribution to the regional stability upon which China’s own prosperity depends, and a commitment to international law as the basis for managing and resolving maritime disputes would do the same, because in truth our region’s stability is under pressure,” Mr Marles said.
He said the international community also needed to band together to introduce tighter controls over maritime traffic, to undermine “gray zone” activity on the high seas.
“We must close legal and institutional gaps that make attribution and accountability so difficult,” Mr Marles said.
“The very doctrine of plausible deniability works precisely because our legal frameworks have not kept pace with tactics. We need stronger national legislation mandating vessel registration and monitoring, regardless of the flag state, we need enhanced enforcement of port state measures. We need financial and criminal penalties that are a genuine deterrent.”
He also reiterated Australia’s call for China to abide by the 2016 decision under the United Nations Convention on Law of the Sea that rejected its claim over most of the waterway.
Taiwan reported five separate cases of seabed cable damage in 2025, compared with three in 2024 and three in 2023.
In one case, in February 2025, Taiwan convicted Chinese cargo ship captain Wang Yuliang of damaging the Taiwan-Penghu No. 3 submarine cable, sentencing him to three years in prison and ordering him to pay approximately $US570,000 ($790.000) in damages to Chunghwa Telecom.
Following two incidents in the Baltic in November 2024, which severed cables between Germany and Finland, and between Sweden and Lithuania, Finnish coastguards seized a Russian shadow fleet vessel Eagle S.
Mr Marles said the shadow fleet problem also extended to sanctions-evasion, the transport of Russian oil, illegal fishing and drug trafficking.
“According to Australia’s own fisheries agency, a third of the total fish catch in Southeast Asia and the Pacific is illegal.
“The fisheries of this region support the livelihoods of nearly two hundred million people. Their systematic plunder is not just an environmental problem. It is a security problem.”
He said technology, including satellite-based monitoring and AI-enabled vessel tracking, already existed to deal with the problem. But it required political will to implement.
“The sea connects our great region. What we must all decide is whether that connection will be governed by the laws we have built together, or contested by the tactics of those who prefer the alternatives,” Mr Marles said.
“Australia’s answer is clear. Rules are essential. And operating by them is the pathway to regional peace, security and prosperity.”
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation/attacks-on-subsea-critical-infrastructure-at-a-scale-unprecedented-says-marles/news-story/15fa18832232f90ff19040ada26195fc
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d0bc64 No.24663282
>>24611802
>>24663222
Sub swap: No new Virginia submarines under AUKUS
BEN PACKHAM - May 30, 2026
1/2
The US will now sell Australia three used Virginia-class submarines rather than a mix of new and in-service boats as planned, in a move pitched as a way to “streamline” the AUKUS program.
Defence Minister Richard Marles, US Secretary of Defence Pete Hegseth, and British Defence Secretary John Healey said the approach was about “simplifying supply chain management, operational and maintenance requirements, and maximising cost efficiencies”.
“This approach would enable Australia to acquire three in-service VCS in lieu of a mixture of new and in-service VCS variants,” they said in a joint statement after meeting at the Shangri La Dialogue in Singapore, where Mr Hegseth said the program was making “great progress”.
Under the previous plan, Australia was to get at least one new submarine. The first two, scheduled for 2032 and 2035, were to be used boats. The third was planned to be an improved and brand new Block VII boat arriving in 2038.
The decision will shorten the life of Australia’s Virginia-class fleet by some years. The first Australian-made AUKUS-class boat is scheduled to enter service in the mid 2040s.
There have been ongoing concerns that US Virginia-class submarine production will not be high enough to meet US needs while also providing boats to Australia, while the UK’s submarine industry is also under strain.
Mr Hegseth said the partnership was at an inflection point ahead of rotational deployments of US submarines to Western Australia next year under AUKUS “Pillar One”.
“Last year President Trump directed that we move full steam ahead on AUKUS, and I’m proud to say that we’ve made great progress on that front,” Mr Hegseth told the media.
“We’re encouraged to continue to see continued Australian investment in its sovereign submarine capabilities, and a willingness for both Australia and the UK to increase burden sharing.”
The leaders also announced a new partnership to develop common payloads for undersea drones under the AUKUS “Pillar Two.”
Mr Marles did not mention the change of plan in a press conference, focusing on the coming rotational force and Australian maintenance on US and British submarines.
“All of this represents the biggest leap in Australia’s military capability in more than a century, really, since the establishment of the navy, and it is being achieved through the co-operation with UK and with the United States,” he said
Mr Healey said “for too long with AUKUS we talked too much and delivered too little.”
“That has now changed under our three governments,” he said.
The first four reactors for the future AUKUS-class submarines, which both the UK and Australia will build, were already under construction, Mr Healey said, amid a £6bn ($11.2bn) investment by the Starmer government.
Mr Hegseth said the new Pillar Two project would deliver “a suite of highly adaptable multi mission … payloads designed to support undersea operations and maintain our collective advantage in maritime building”.
(continued)
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d0bc64 No.24663285
>>24663282
2/2
US Virginia-class submarine production is running at about 1.3 boats a year – well short of the 2.33 a year needed to provide three to Australia in the 2030s.
The British submarine sector is also under strain, with a House of Commons report last month warning leadership failures and investment woes were already threatening the program.
Earlier, Mr Hegseth praised Australia for “stepping up” as he chided other Pacific allies as looking for a “free ride” and relying on the “generosity of the American taxpayer”.
“The era of the United States subsidising the defence of wealthy nations is over,” he said.
The Trump administration has called for Australia to increase its defence spending to 3.5 per cent of GDP. The Albanese government says it will reach 3 per cent by 2033.
“Together we are expanding the rotational presence of US forces and collaborating to ensure our defence industrial base builds and sustains weapons required for a high-end fight,” Mr Hegseth said.
“We appreciate Australia’s investment in real combat power and the commitment to integrate more deeply with the US Joint Force.”
He also criticised Europe for ignoring “polite pleas” to “spend more on their own defence”.
“For those who believe they can continue to free ride on the generosity of the American taxpayer, hear us now – those days are over,” he said.
“Allies who refuse to step up and carry their own weight for our collective defence will face a clear shift in how we do business.
“President Trump believes in helping countries that help themselves. And the United States Department of War feels the exact same way.”
Meanwhile, Mr Marles warned a surge in damage to subsea cables has transformed the seabed into a “battlefield”, urging greater transparency from Beijing around its maritime operations and tighter international controls over “shadow fleet” vessels.
He said internet cables, “the arteries of modern civilisation”, were being cut at an unprecedented rate, with Australia and the Indo-Pacific particularly vulnerable.
“Over the past 18 months, we have witnessed a series of attacks against subsea critical infrastructure at a scale and frequency that is historically unprecedented,” he told the annual strategic forum.
“The seabed is becoming a battlefield. The shadow fleet is becoming a weapon.”
Mr Marles called on Beijing, which has a huge shadow fleet, to come clean on its activities at sea.
“A commitment to transparency around its maritime operations would be a meaningful contribution to the regional stability upon which China’s own prosperity depends, and a commitment to international law as the basis for managing and resolving maritime disputes would do the same, because in truth our region’s stability is under pressure,” Mr Marles said.
He said the international community also needed to band together to introduce tighter controls over maritime traffic, to undermine “grey zone” activity on the high seas.
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation/hegseth-praises-australia-for-stepping-up-says-aukus-making-great-progress/news-story/99f30b2df4cc4c0cc9dae39ce3b7f3ac
https://www.minister.defence.gov.au/statements/2026-05-30/joint-statement-aukus-defence-ministers-meeting
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d0bc64 No.24663306
>>24611802
>>24663222
>>24663282
Marles points to savings after US downgrades AUKUS sub to second-hand version
Matthew Knott and Lisa Visentin - May 31, 2026
1/2
Defence Minister Richard Marles says taxpayers will save money by ditching a plan to acquire a new and upgraded nuclear-powered submarine from the United States, but experts warn Australia will receive a less capable vessel with a shorter lifespan under the AUKUS shift.
Marles and US Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth on Saturday said the last of three Virginia-class submarines Australia plans to buy from the US will now be second-hand rather than a new boat as originally planned.
Under the AUKUS plan announced in 2023, Australia was to buy a mix of new and second-hand submarines from the US. The vision was for two second-hand US submarines to arrive beginning in 2032 and the third submarine was to be a new and improved Block VII Virginia-class boat.
All three vessels will now be used Block IV submarines that may already have been in service for years, and possibly over a decade, each, compared with the 33-year lifespan of a new boat.
Marles defended the decision on the basis that it reduced complexity by ensuring all Virginia class boats were a consistent set, and there would be a “significant” reduction to the purchase price of the final US submarine and the associated training and operational costs.
“We don’t get the additional cost and complexity of operating a one-off submarine which is different to all the rest,” Marles said in an interview.
“The reality here is that is the single biggest issue and challenge associated with that third submarine if we keep it as it is, which is why we see this as a significantly good outcome.”
He declined to quantify what the saving would be, but he said it wouldn’t substantially change the underlying cost of the AUKUS project.
“We need to be chasing savings where we can and be as prudent as possible, so [this decision] matters. But this is a big program, and we get this one submarine cheaper — it doesn’t fundamentally alter the overall envelope here, which is 0.15 per cent of GDP.”
Pressed on why Australia had sought a new submarine under the “optimal” AUKUS pathway if a used model represented a better outcome, Marles said: “We are just as happy to go down this path because it very much does give us consistency.”
He declined to put a figure on how many years left of service the third submarine would have by the time it was transferred to Australian hands, but he said it would arrive in a condition consistent with the first and second used boats and that it would still have “a lot of years of service left”.
“What we’re getting is a submarine well within its life, immediately after deep maintenance,” he said. It would have “more than half” of its operational life left, he said.
The decision is widely believed to be linked to senior Pentagon official Elbridge Colby’s AUKUS review, which was completed at the end of last year but has not been made public.
Colby had previously expressed concern that providing Virginia-class submarines to Australia could deplete the US Navy’s reserves, given sluggish American production rates.
Asked whether lags in the US production schedule had contributed to this shift in direction, Marles said: “It’s definitely not part of this decision at all.”
Marles, Hegseth and British Defence Secretary John Healey said in a statement that the decision was about “simplifying supply chain management, operational and maintenance requirements, and maximising cost efficiencies”.
(continued)
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d0bc64 No.24663311
>>24663306
2/2
The government estimates the total cost of the AUKUS scheme will be between $268 billion and $368 billion over three decades, making it the biggest defence procurement project in Australian history.
Opposition defence spokesman James Paterson said: “This appears to be a significant change of plan for acquisition of Virginia-class submarines … I will be seeking an explanation from Defence at Senate estimates this week about why this change was made and what the implications are.”
Former senior defence official Michael Shoebridge said: “This is bad news. The new Virginias are more capable and easier to maintain … The US aren’t building enough submarines so they are keeping the more capable ones for themselves.”
The new Block VII submarine Australia had been slated to acquire from the late 2030s has been described by trade publication Army Recognition as “one of the final and most advanced versions of the Virginia-class submarine, with improved stealth, greater use of unmanned underwater systems, and enhanced capability for long-range strike and seabed operations”.
Virginia-class submarines are estimated to cost $US5 billion ($6.95 billion) each to produce, including weapons, according to the US congressional research service.
Marles said there had long been debate about whether Australia should seek to acquire a new submarine from the US, as this could mean the Australian navy would be operating four different types of submarine at once: the Collins-class submarine, two types of Virginia-class submarine and the new SSN-AUKUS nuclear-powered submarine being developed between Britain and Australia.
Greens senator David Shoebridge said it was ridiculous for Marles to paint the decision as a win for Australia, describing AUKUS as a “dud deal” for Australia.
“You cannot make this stuff up on AUKUS,” he said.
Former naval officer Jennifer Parker said she supported the decision, while acknowledging there were downsides to the move.
“This reduces risk and complexity in what is already a very ambitious program,” said Parker, an adjunct fellow in naval studies at UNSW.
“If the three submarines we buy come from the same block, they will have the same configuration, same training and maintenance requirements and same spare parts. We won’t have to put them through the trials for initial certification. These boats will still be streets ahead of any other attack submarines in the world.”
However, she added: “The third submarine will now be a less capable boat than it would have been and will have less life in it. It may have 20 years left of service rather than 33.”
https://www.theage.com.au/politics/federal/marles-points-to-savings-after-us-downgrades-aukus-sub-to-second-hand-version-20260531-p602ez.html
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d0bc64 No.24663327
YouTube embed. Click thumbnail to play.
>>24611802
>>24660508
>>24663222
>>24663282
AUKUS partners unveil plan to develop underwater drones by 2027
Stephen Dziedzic - 30 May 2026
The US, Australia and United Kingdom have unveiled a new "signature" project to develop cutting edge weapons systems and sensors for underwater drones as they try to reinvigorate the second pillar of the AUKUS agreement.
The new "marquee" project was unveiled by US Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth, Defence Minister Richard Marles and UK Defence Secretary John Healey at the US embassy in Singapore, on the sidelines of the IISS Shangri-La Dialogue.
While most of the public debate on AUKUS has focused on the Pillar I nuclear-powered submarines plan, there has been less attention on the Pillar II initiative to develop sophisticated military technology, with numerous critics saying the program has been drifting.
Mr Healey told journalists that "for too long on AUKUS we have talked too much and delivered too little" but declared that the three current governments were intent on changing that.
Mr Marles called the announcement "hugely significant" and said all three countries would move to deliver the new technology from 2027.
"This is all three countries putting real money behind a capability we will put into the hands of the war fighter next year," he said.
Mr Hegseth told journalists in Singapore that the new drones would help the three nations maintain their "collective advantage" in the technology.
The exact quantum of the new investment in underwater drone technology is not clear.
Mr Healey said he had committed more than $US170 million ($236m) to the project, but neither Australia or the US have yet publicly committed to a figure.
All three governments hope the new initiative will help develop underwater drones that can protect undersea cables, engage in sophisticated surveillance missions and strike enemy targets.
Mr Healey said the new drone technology would help all three countries "detect, deter and deal with threats, including to the underwater pipelines and cables which so much of our daily life depends on".
Earlier in the day Mr Marles also sounded the alarm about the number of subsea cables which have been cut in the Baltic Sea and near Taiwan, saying if they were intentional acts then some countries could be "testing our political will to respond".
The head of the Australian Strategic Policy Institute Justin Bassi said the three nations were "smart" to reveal what work was being done on the underwater drones.
"Democracies are being tested by Russia and China with hybrid threats, including cable cutting and illegal naval actions," he said.
"This signals that these acts of sabotage and aggression will no longer be tolerated by AUKUS nations."
China has previously described cable damage incidents in the Taiwan Strait as "common maritime accidents", while Russia has dismissed accusations of involvement in similar incidents in the Baltic as "completely groundless".
All three AUKUS defence ministers also again backed in the plan to sell Virginia Class nuclear powered submarines to Australia in the 2030s.
The three ministers said in their joint statement the US would "streamline" the process to ensure Australia could acquire three of the submarines "already in service".
That appears to be a slight shift from previous statements and opens the door to Australia buying three submarines from the existing fleet of Virginia class submarines — rather than buying a mixture of submarines both in the water and off the production line.
https://www.abc.net.au/news/2026-05-30/aukus-announcement-to-develop-undersea-vehicles/106741398
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cg4DvgGUgdk
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d0bc64 No.24663375
>>24611802
>>24621702
>>24663222
>>24663282
>>24663306
ANALYSIS: Switch to only used Virginia-class subs a sign of deeper problems
BEN PACKHAM - 31 May 2026
The AUKUS partners were cock-a-hoop at the Shangri-La Dialogue in Singapore on Saturday, with US Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth claiming “great progress” was being made on the submarine program.
It emerged only later that a significant change had been made to the $368bn AUKUS plan that underscores concerns over the enterprise.
Australia originally negotiated to buy what would be the US’s most advanced Block VII Virginia-class submarine straight off the production line in 2038.
Now we learn we will get another in-service submarine, after two used models scheduled to arrive in 2032 and 2035.
The Block IV boats will still have plenty of service life left in them. The first two at least will go for another 20 years.
But they will not last as long or be as capable as a new boat, placing added pressure on Australia’s domestic submarine build.
Defence Minister Richard Marles argues the change of plan will make things simpler and cheaper for Australia, reducing training and maintenance requirements.
“In the context of a very complicated endeavour, we need to place a premium on simplicity,” he says.
This argument has some merit. Operating three of the same Virginia-class variant will make it easier for Australian crews and those who will maintain the boats.
But the real story here is not about Australia. It’s about the lack of confidence in the US system about its submarine industrial base.
The US Navy wants the most advanced submarines it can get for a potential war against China and fears it won’t have enough.
Virginia-class production is running at 1.3 boats a year, according to the latest reports from the US.
US Navy officials have said for years that rate needs to get to 2.33 boats a year to sell Australia its promised subs.
Many suspect the hand of US Under Secretary of Defence Elbridge Colby in the decision to sell Australia only in-service boats.
Colby, the Pentagon’s chief strategist, said just over a year ago in his confirmation hearing that the US’s attack submarines “are absolutely essential for making the defence of Taiwan”.
“So, if we can produce the attack submarines in sufficient number and sufficient speed, then great. But if we can’t, (supplying Australia) becomes a very difficult problem, because we don’t want our servicemen and women to be in a weaker position and more vulnerable and, God forbid, worse because they are not in the right place in the right time.“
He has also warned it would be “highly imprudent” for the US to hand over Virginia-class boats to Australia without an “an iron-clad guarantee they can be employed at the will of the United States”.
No Australian government would never provide such a commitment, because the nation needs to maintain sovereign control over its own military capabilities.
This all comes barely a fortnight after Marles confirmed another change to Australia’s pathway to nuclear submarines – the scaling back of upgrades to the navy’s Collins-class boats that will still have to operate for 10 years’ beyond their original design life.
The Auditor-General found the government wasted $700m of taxpayers’ money pursuing more substantial upgrades that now won’t happen.
The Albanese government wants Australians to believe that all is well with AUKUS, but there is much to be concerned about.
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation/switch-in-us-submarines-priority-a-sign-of-deeper-problems/news-story/a6ee0b1d1030f6630d5ef66480cdb479
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d0bc64 No.24665814
>>24599875
>>24636207
>>24662516
Woman at centre of fresh Andrew allegation was Royal Ascot waitress
Dipesh Gadher - May 31, 2026
The woman at the centre of allegations of inappropriate behaviour by Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor at Royal Ascot was working as a waitress at the racing festival.
The Sunday Times revealed last week that detectives are examining the alleged incident as part of a broader investigation into Andrew over the offence of misconduct in public office.
Andrew is said to have behaved inappropriately towards the woman in 2002 when his mother, Queen Elizabeth, attended the meet in Berkshire with other senior royals during her Golden Jubilee Year.
Police have not commented on when they were first made aware of the allegation. However, it is not thought to have been reported by staff to race course management at the time.
Andrew attended at least two days of the five-day festival in June 2002, and was photographed alongside his older brother, the future King, and his younger brother, Prince Edward.
A highlight of the annual sporting and social calendar, Royal Ascot lays on lavish hospitality, including champagne lunches, for its guests, and hires hundreds of additional catering staff on temporary contracts.
In 2000, Andrew hosted Jeffrey Epstein, the disgraced paedophile financier, and Ghislaine Maxwell, Epstein’s former girlfriend, in the royal enclosure on Ladies’ Day.
He last attended the event in the summer of 2019, just months before he was forced to step back from his royal duties following an interview with the BBC’s Newsnight programme in which he failed to express any sympathy for Epstein’s victims.
In February, Andrew was arrested on his 66th birthday at his new home on the Sandringham estate in Norfolk on suspicion of misconduct in public office (MiPO).
He was held in custody for 11 hours before being released under investigation. Andrew has always denied any wrongdoing.
Detectives at Thames Valley Police are focusing on Andrew’s ten-year stint as a government trade envoy from 2001-11. During this time, files released by the US Justice Department suggest he shared confidential government reports with Epstein.
However, the force disclosed earlier this month that its inquiry is considering a much wider range of potential crimes than was previously understood, including sexual offences and corruption.
Police chiefs said any new evidence could either form part of its ongoing MiPO investigation or be pursued as “standalone” offences.
Asked a series of questions about the alleged incident at Royal Ascot, a Thames Valley spokeswoman said: “We cannot go into specifics of our ongoing investigation, but we are following all reasonable lines of inquiry.”
Ascot Racecourse declined to comment. However, a source indicated that it will co-operate with police if asked to do so.
On Saturday, BBC News reported that emails which appeared to show Andrew sharing confidential government information with a business associate were passed to Buckingham Palace six years ago.
The emails are alleged to have been stolen from Jonathan Rowland, whose banker father, David, has been described by Andrew as his “trusted money man”.
The cache of documents formed part of a High Court dispute between the Rowlands and a business rival, Kevin Stanford, who is said to have passed on the emails to the lord chamberlain, the most senior figure in the royal household, in May 2020.
The King has previously offered to “fully co-operate” with the police investigation into Andrew.
Buckingham Palace said: “Since there is an ongoing police inquiry concerning Mr Mountbatten-Windsor, it is not possible to provide any comment on these matters.”
Andrew was contacted for comment.
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/world/the-times/royal-ascot-waitress-at-center-of-new-andrew-mountbattenwindsor-allegation/news-story/b2856b9fcb1cbe766ea8919494a9b7ee
https://www.thetimes.com/uk/royal-family/article/andrew-mountbatten-windsor-royal-ascot-waitress-7g8n2rp53
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d0bc64 No.24665824
>>24610615
>>24636351
>>24648784
How a heckle brought Australia’s gender wars to Hay-on-Wye
Two gay Welsh women protesting at the literary festival has thrust a bitter legal battle over an Australian women-only app onto the world stage
Hugo Daniel - 30 May 2026
1/2
Sall Grover was not aware that her name had been shouted at a former Australian prime minister, on stage at the Hay Festival, until she saw a post about it on social media.
On Monday a female protester attending the Women in Politics event at the literary festival in Hay-on-Wye, yelled “what about Sall Grover?” at Julia Gillard, Australia’s first and only female leader. A second protester held up a banner that read: “Julia Gillard, DESTROYER OF WOMEN’S RIGHTS.”
Grover, a 41-year-old former journalist, saw a post about it on X. She has been at the centre of a row over transgender rights in Australia after founding a social app for women called Giggle for Girls.
This month Grover lost an appeal against a ruling by Australia’s federal court that found she had discriminated against a transgender woman, Roxanne Tickle, who had been blocked from using Giggle for Girls. The court in Sydney found Grover discriminated against Tickle and awarded Tickle A$20,000 (£10,700).
Gillard has been a target for protesters who argue that biological women’s rights were diluted in Australia’s Sex Discrimination Act under her government. The 1984 law was amended in 2013 to include a person’s self-identified gender, which was a factor in this high-profile court case.
Gillard appeared taken aback by the heckler at Hay, in Powys, but did not respond. Grover, however, was pleased to see it. “I am so grateful,” Grover told The Sunday Times by email. She has since been put in touch with the protesters and thanked them, describing them as “two amazing lesbian women in Wales”.
“It takes time and effort to do what they did, and the whole point is it’s everyday women taking time out of their lives to showcase bravery to cowardly politicians who crumble at the mere sight of challenge,” she said.
Grover said British women had led the way in bringing “attention to the madness of gender ideology and holding the people responsible for it to account”. She added: “Australia is about four years behind the UK on the issue of gender ideology.”
Of her former prime minister, Grover pulled no punches. “Julia Gillard’s decision to amend the Sex Discrimination Act has directly led to the erosion of woman-only spaces, sports and events, including lesbian-only events … [Her] actions have directly destroyed women’s rights and we are now cleaning up her mess,” she said.
“Julia Gillard is going to have to address this issue eventually. You cannot dine out on being the first woman prime minister and then ignore the fact that you removed women from law … I think that [she] is going to have to get used to women asking her what a woman is, and it will travel with her around the world until she takes responsibility for it.”
On stage alongside Gillard were the former Scottish Conservative leader, Baroness Davidson of Lundin Links, the Labour peer Baroness Harman, and the Sky News political editor Beth Rigby, with the panel moderated by the BBC’s Europe editor and Today show presenter, Katya Adler.
After the heckle, Adler said: “It’s not the time for this right now,” drawing applause from the crowd. The panel members then left the stage and Gillard was escorted from the venue through a rear exit and away from public view. Grover criticised Adler’s handling of the situation. “A decent journalist would lean into the ‘controversy’,” she said. “Julia Gillard should have been asked if she was aware of the Giggle v Tickle decision and what it means for women’s rights. She should be asked, ‘Is this the future for women and girls that she wanted?’”
Mary Douglas, one of the hecklers at Hay, told The Sunday Times in a statement that she and her fellow protester “have been fighting for lesbian and women’s rights for decades and are horrified at the way everything we fought for seems to be at risk”. She added that they have been “shocked at the way things have been going in Australia” and, after hearing Gillard was speaking at Hay, had hoped to question her at the event. “We’ve been going to Hay for decades and almost every event we’ve ever been to has involved a Q&A session in the last 10 minutes.”
The Tickle vs Giggle court row, as it has become known in Australia, has been rumbling on for four years. The Sex Discrimination Act prohibits providers of goods or services from discriminating against people on the basis of sex, sexual orientation, gender identity and marital status. The case was the first to legally test the gender identity protections added in 2013.
(continued)
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d0bc64 No.24665829
>>24665824
2/2
Tickle successfully sued Grover for blocking her account on grounds of gender identity, and the Federal Court found Grover and Giggle unlawfully discriminated against the 54-year-old.
Grover then lodged an appeal against that verdict last year, with JK Rowling tweeting her support. On May 15 the Federal Court upheld 2024’s decision, dismissing Grover’s appeal and further finding Tickle was directly, rather than indirectly, discriminated against by Grover.
All three judges ruled Tickle’s exclusion from the app because she appeared to be a man amounted to an act of discrimination and said Giggle and Grover had treated Tickle “less favourably than a woman designated female at birth”.
Grover told The Sunday Times she did not remember seeing or removing Tickle from Giggle.
After the ruling, Tickle told reporters outside the court: “I’m very pleased by the outcome of my case, and I hope that it assists trans and gender-diverse people and their loved ones to heal. I’ve brought my case to show trans people that you can be brave and that you can stand up for yourself. In the process, I surprised myself at how brave I could be.”
Giggle, which was founded by Grover in 2020, has been offline since 2022 because of the court case. After working as an entertainment journalist, Grover had a career in Hollywood as a screenwriter, where she experienced sexual harassment. “I was in LA in the pre-MeToo era and it was as bad as everyone says,” she said.
She returned to Australia “a shell of a person” and had a “lightbulb moment” while in therapy about women needing strong female support, coming up with the idea for the app with her mother.
She said she was “devastated” at the recent verdict but says she “will never regret standing up for the truth, reality, rights, and women and girls”. She now wants to take the case to the Australian High Court, the country’s highest court, equivalent to the UK’s Supreme Court.
Last year the UK Supreme Court ruled that a woman is defined by biological sex under equalities law, after the group For Women Scotland brought a case against the Scottish government.
“The UK Supreme Court is 100 per cent correct and has shown the world that it is possible to stand up to gender ideology and assert fact over fiction,” Grover said.
She believes “activists have managed to capture the majority of Australian institutions” and hopes an outcry over her court case could lead to similar change in Australia: “The political conversation is catching up”.
“It is basically a race in Australia to see if the High Court or politicians fix this issue first,” she added. “Politicians need to fix the law, that is obvious, but the High Court can reassert the need and reality of women’s right to women-only spaces.”
However, Paula Gerber, a professor of human rights law at Monash University in Melbourne, described the judgment in favour of Tickle as a “victory for women’s rights”.
Gerber says the Hay festival protester’s criticism of Gillard was “inflammatory and unfounded”, arguing the 2013 amendment “passed without the need for a formal vote because the bill enjoyed broad support across Labor, the Coalition and the Greens (Australia’s three most prominent political parties).
“Julia Gillard didn’t destroy women’s rights, she strengthened them, and the government she led drafted an Act that is a model for the world,” Gerber added. She called the UK Supreme Court decision “flawed”.
Grover hopes to relaunch her app one day and, if she does, she would not allow transgender women to use it. “No man will ever be on any woman-only platform I create. I don’t care how he identifies.”
She urged Gillard to make a public statement about the issue. “I think it would be a pivotal moment, where a lot of respect could be earned, if she admitted that the amendments were a mistake and they didn’t consider the unintended consequences of writing women out of law … it would be a major political moment.”
Julie Finch, Hay Festival’s chief executive, said the event was not cut short and there had never been plans to hold a Q&A. “Hay Festival exists as a charity to create spaces of accessible cultural exchange. We share diverse viewpoints across our platforms and continue to develop appropriate formats for nuanced debate,” she added.
Gillard, Tickle and Adler were approached for comment.
https://www.thetimes.com/world/australasia/article/sall-grover-giggle-tickle-hay-festival-julia-gillard-trans-zjvz9z9tc
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d0bc64 No.24665865
>>24610615
>>24636351
>>24648784
>>24665824
>>24649831
The exchange which proved the absurdity of Australia’s gender laws
Terry Barnes - 31 May 2026
Almost 150 years ago, the famed British jurist A. V. Dicey wrote that sovereign parliaments ‘can do everything but make a man a woman, and a woman a man’. Yet in Australia, Britain and elsewhere, parliaments now have done just that. Ideological and legislative contortions over biological sex and gender fluidity have created concomitant absurdities, something crystallised by an Australian court case attracting global attention: the improbably-named Giggle v Tickle.
Roxanne Tickle was born male but identifies as female. Tickle had gender reassignment surgery and erased her birth name, with a new birth certificate.
Sall Grover is an Australian businesswoman running an online safe space for women called Giggle. She vets who applies to join Giggle. Tickle applied, providing a selfie for identification. Grover reviewed the photo and determined Tickle was not a woman; Tickle took Grover to court, and in 2024 not just won the case, but was awarded exemplary damages because Grover was amused by something in court, to which Tickle had taken offence.
Earlier this month, the full court of the Federal Court of Australia – equivalent to England’s Court of Appeal – handed down its decision. The full court not only upheld the trial judge’s decision that Tickle was unfairly and unlawfully discriminated against by Grover and Giggle, but the exemplary damages award against was doubled.
The trial judge’s reasoning was upheld: that gender is a fluid concept and not grounded in biological reality; that services intended for biological woman must be open to self-identified transgender women; and that all of this is sanctioned by a 2013 reworking of the definition of sex and gender in Australia’s Sex Discrimination Act, which extended the Act’s protections against discrimination to self-identified – transgender – women.
The furore around the Federal Court’s judgment has accelerated momentum for the law to be changed, both to safeguard the rights of biological women, and to afford them safe spaces lawfully excluding biological men, be that Grover’s online app, or physical spaces including women’s toilets and dressing rooms. With her party’s support, this week an Opposition MP, Alison Penfold, introduced a private member’s bill to do just that. Her second reading speech endorsing Sall Grover went viral, tweeted by J.K. Rowling amongst others.
Regardless of the higher principles at stake, the current law patently needs changing because of the absurdities it’s created. These were highlighted this week in a surreal exchange between a senator and former Attorney-General, Michaelia Cash, and Australia’s Sex Discrimination Commissioner, Anna Cody, at a parliamentary estimates hearing.
Cash asked Cody about how the Sex Discrimination Act protected pregnant women, and whether trans women were covered by it. After initially agreeing trans women, as biological males, couldn’t get pregnant, Cody became entangled in a self-created web of illogic, asserting that while trans women couldn’t become pregnant, they could be discriminated against as ‘potentially pregnant’.
‘I’m very confused. A biological male can’t become pregnant’, Cash responded, astonished. Cody then tried, tortuously, to explain her position that a trans woman looking for a job could be discriminated against if she looked to be of childbearing age, which would make her ‘potentially pregnant’.
‘So if a bloke came in and (an employer) said, “were they going to have children?”, and he said “yeah, maybe”, are you saying he could also claim that ground?’
‘No, not a man,’ said Cody.
‘But they’re both biological men, it makes no sense…a biological man can’t get pregnant’ snapped back Cash.
‘But a trans woman may be assumed to be pregnant, or to be able to be pregnant’, Cody responded, her very bureaucratic earnestness making her sound even more absurd.
‘So what’s stopping a man in a dress walking in and claiming the protections?’, asked Cash, closing for the kill.
‘That would be up to a court’, replied the hapless commissioner, effectively conceding being ‘a bloke in a dress’ is enough to qualify as trans in Australia.
(continued)
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d0bc64 No.24665866
>>24665865
2/2
‘The law must change’, declared a victorious Cash. She had proved Australia’s gender definition law is an ass, and she’s absolutely right. Unfortunately, however, the Penfold bill won’t pass. The 2013 definitions were enacted by then Labor prime minister Julia Gillard, and her socially permissive Labor successor Anthony Albanese (whose own inner Sydney seat hosts a sizeable LGBT population) won’t have a bar it. ‘Look, I’m not engaging in cultural wars here’, he dismissively told an interviewer asking about the Opposition bill. Nor will left-leaning independents and the hard-left Australian Greens – whose deputy leader cannot bear to utter the word ‘grandfather’ and coined the ridiculous substitute ‘grandperson’ – support it.
But the parliamentary vote to block the bill will tell an unimpressed electorate which MPs are on the side of protecting biological women, and which ones aren’t. As in Britain, ensuring safe spaces for biological women has become a political fault line between the progressive political and cultural elites and the wider electorate. Giggle v Tickle, and how Australia’s judiciary so enthusiastically enforced the 2013 gender definition changes in the two judgments against Sall Grover, has cut through politically. It is what former Australian prime minister, John Howard, would call a ‘barbeque stopper’ conversation topic.
Grover insists she will take her case to the highest court of appeal, Australia’s High Court, hoping that common sense finally prevails, as it did in the UK Supreme Court’s 2025 ruling on the Equalities Act. Whether or not she succeeds, Sall Grover is a heroine of free speech and thought. Instead of being treated as a heretic and pariah by identity politics elites backing biological male Roxanne Tickle, for her daring to defy them, Grover deserves admiration for her courage in standing firm against the judicially-backed trans activists so determined to destroy her.
https://spectator.com/article/the-exchange-which-proved-the-absurdity-of-australias-gender-laws/
https://x.com/salltweets/status/2059210493227860393
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3cb6c0 No.24665905
>>24663282
>>24663327
There's this from a maritime site
==AUKUS Ministers Commit to 2027 Sub Base
gCaptain May 30, 2026
AUKUS defense chiefs set a hard date on Saturday for the pact’s most tangible promise. The year is 2027, and the milestone is standing up Submarine Rotational Force-West (SRF-West) at HMAS Stirling in Western Australia. It’s the rotational nuclear-submarine presence that will test whether the trilateral deal delivers steel in the water or stays a partnership on paper.
Australian Deputy Prime Minister and Defence Minister Richard Marles, U.S. Secretary of War Pete Hegseth, and U.K. Defence Secretary John Healey met in Singapore and announced they had finalized the AUKUS arrangements. Authorized U.S. Navy support elements will begin rotating the first American sailors to HMAS Stirling later this year. The U.K. reaffirmed it will join the rotation, and pointed to the maintenance period its Astute-class boat HMS Anson completed in Australia earlier this year as proof the concept already works.
For the maritime and naval-industrial world, the payoff is concrete. SRF-West expands maintenance options and sustainment infrastructure in the Indo-Pacific, and it’s meant to compress the timeline for Australia to own, operate and maintain nuclear-powered submarine force. The maintenance and crewing muscle built at Stirling now is what makes a sovereign capability credible later.
The money behind the milestone
The ministers acknowledged the scale of Australia’s spending is the real story. Canberra plans to invest up to AUD 8 billion at SRF-West for infrastructure and logistics support at HMAS Stirling. That sits on top of an initial AUD 3.9 billion down payment for the new Submarine Construction Yard in South Australia and AUD 12 billion for the Henderson Defense Precinct in Western Australia. Part of the Henderson money goes to contingency docking and depot-level maintenance, the kind of heavy-industrial dry-dock capacity the region has lacked.
The bet is straightforward. Australia is paying for the shipyards, dry docks, and logistics tail before the submarines arrive, on the theory that infrastructure is the long-lead item you can’t surge. The United States will be able to repair forward deployed submarines without having to sail back to the states. Whether Henderson and the South Australia yard can be built and crewed on schedule is the variable that will decide if 2027 holds.
Buying Virginia-class boats off the line, not off the drawing board
The ministers also announced a change to how Australia acquires its Virginia-class submarines (VCS). Rather than a mix of newly built and in-service variants, the new approach would have Australia acquire three in-service Virginia-class boats, simplifying supply-chain management, operations, and maintenance while squeezing out cost.
This is the pragmatic move but the unspoken constraint hasn’t changed: the U.S. submarine industrial base has struggled to build Virginia-class boats on time and on budget, and every hull transferred to Australia is one the U.S. Navy doesn’t keep. Streamlining Australia’s order doesn’t fix the throughput problem at Groton and Newport News. It just makes Australia’s slice of it cleaner.
On the longer horizon, the ministers reported “significant progress” on the design and delivery of SSN-AUKUS, the next-generation boat the U.K. and Australia will operate. The work is underwritten in part by the GBP 6 billion the U.K. committed in 2025.
Pillar II: the first project is underwater drones
On the advanced-capabilities side of AUKUS, known as Pillar II, the ministers named their first “Signature Project.” It will develop cutting-edge payloads and enabling systems for the partners’ uncrewed undersea vehicles (UUVs), with delivery starting in 2027.
This may be the more forward-looking announcement. Top of the Pillar II list is protecting critical national seabed infrastructure, the cables and pipelines whose vulnerability has been on display in the Baltic and elsewhere. The rest covers surveillance, reconnaissance, and strike, plus logistics, anti-submarine and anti-surface warfare, mine countermeasures, electronic warfare, and contested littoral maneuver. Crewed Virginia-class boats are the headline, but autonomous undersea systems are where the partnership can move at a tempo that doesn’t depend on a decade of shipyard buildout.
Tearing down the trade wall
Finally, the ministers backed widening the AUKUS license-free environment by narrowing the list of excluded technologies. Those carve-outs are what kept the export-control wall standing despite the headline reforms. The ministers also reaffirmed the Advanced Capabilities Industry Forum as the channel for deeper trilateral industrial collaboration.
The bottom line
The constraints that have dogged AUKUS from the start haven’t gone away, namely U.S. submarine production rates, Australian shipyard and dry-dock construction at Henderson and Osborne, and the workforce to crew and sustain nuclear boats. But the program has moved from promising to scheduling. Two years out, the question is no longer whether AUKUS is real. It’s whether the industrial base on three continents can keep the calendar it just signed.
https://gcaptain.com/aukus-ministers-commit-to-2027-sub-base/
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d0bc64 No.24665937
>>24663282
>>24665905
The nuclear substitutes: pressure mounts with AUKUS subs deadline
BEN PACKHAM - 31 May 2026
1/2
Australia’s AUKUS timeline has been placed under fresh pressure amid revelations the navy will get three second-hand Virginia-class boats from the US, leaving little room for delay in the nation’s domestic submarine construction plan.
In the first major change to the pact at the heart of the nation’s military strategy, it has been revealed that Australia’s third nuclear boat would no longer be an advanced model straight off the US production line.
The submarine, scheduled for delivery in 2038, will instead be an in-service boat like those expected to arrive in 2032 and 2035, which will have about 20 years’ service life remaining of their original 33 years.
Defence Minister Richard Marles said operating three of the same Virginia-class variants would make the AUKUS plan simpler and cheaper for Australia, and there had been a “live conversation” over the move for the past three years.
“This is a complicated endeavour. In the context of that, simplicity comes at a premium,” he said. “I cannot overstate the significance of that, both in terms of the submariners who are operating them, but also the people who are working on them to sustain those submarines.”
The change of plan will come under scrutiny in Senate estimates this week, with opposition defence spokesman James Paterson demanding a “proper explanation from the government” for its deviation from the AUKUS “optimal pathway”.
At the Shangri-La Dialogue on Saturday, US Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth lavished praise on Australia, declaring the Albanese government was “stepping up” to contribute to collective defence and making “great progress” on the AUKUS plan. But he revealed in a later statement with Mr Marles and British Defence Secretary John Healey that there would be a new approach to “streamline” Australia’s acquisition of Virginia-class submarines.
“This approach would enable Australia to acquire three in-service VCS in lieu of a mixture of new and in-service VCS variants,” they said, arguing it would simplify maintenance and maximise cost efficiencies.
The move follows long-running problems in the US submarine industry, which is producing just 1.3 Virginia-class boats a year – well under the 2.33 the US Navy says are needed to provide subs to Australia.
Australia has transferred $2.8bn to the Trump administration of a promised $4.5bn to help revive US submarine construction. The UK’s submarine industry, which Australia is relying on to design the new SSN AUKUS, is also under immense strain, and is getting another $4.5bn from Australian taxpayers.
Former navy warfare officer and Adjunct Professor at the University of Western Australia, Jennifer Parker, said the change of course would leave no margin for error in the AUKUS-class build in Adelaide, which is scheduled to deliver the first Australian-made nuclear-powered submarine in the mid-2040s.
“Acquiring three boats of the same class makes sense for training and sustainment,” she said.
“But the trade off is that the boats will have less operational life in the RAN. This does put pressure on the SSN AUKUS build.
“The UK have been averaging over a decade per boat for their Astute SSNs. Australia will not be able to afford delays in the build start date (for SSN AUKUS) or a lengthy production time.”
(continued)
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d0bc64 No.24665939
>>24665937
2/2
Former Defence official Marcus Hellyer said he had “zero confidence” the AUKUS plan would proceed according to the government’s so-called “optimal pathway”, which he argued mirrored the “slow train wreck” of Australia’s wider shipbuilding plan.
He said the “glacial” uplift in the US Virginia-class submarine production rate was unlikely to hit two boats a year until “well into the 2030s”, at best, making it difficult for the US to hand over any of the boats to Australia.
Dr Hellyer said Australia would “never” have got a brand new Virginia class submarine in 2038, because it would “definitely” have undermined US submarine capability. He also backed Mr Marles’ push for a simpler option, saying it would have made “no sense” to have the a Virginia-class submarine that would have outlasted the earlier two and retire in the early 2070s.
“If they are only an intermediate transition stage in the plan, why would you invest all the money in getting brand new Virginias?” Dr Hellyer said.
Strategic Analysis Australia director Michael Shoebridge said the change was driven by the US, rather than Australia.
“The actual story is the US wants the new, more capable, easier-to-maintain Virginias for itself, and it’s doing this despite all the billions we’re handing over upfront,” he said.
He said the vacillating over the program came as China roared ahead with its construction of nuclear-powered attack submarines, building ten in the last five years.
“Their latest Type 95 submarine looks like it’s getting close to the Virginia-class in terms of capability, and their pace of production of submarines is outpacing the AUKUS nations,” Mr Shoebridge said. “So the Americans are going to get even more concerned about their fleet numbers.”
The decision also raised the ire of Labor’s internal AUKUS critics.
Labor Against War national convener Marcus Strom said: “Richard Marles is selling the fact he’s been dudded, forced to take dodgy Pete Hegseth’s second-hand subs as ‘significant savings’.
“The fact is (that) for the US, whether Australia gets submarines is unimportant. For America, AUKUS is about gaining forward operating bases against China for nuclear weapons capable subs and bombers – and forcing Canberra to pay billions in tribute for the privilege.”
Some of the most staunch AUKUS supporters have also expressed their doubts over the program. Last week, Australia’s former ambassador to the US Joe Hockey said he was “a little nervous” about the plan because America had been unable to lift submarine production.
“Ninety per cent of the Virginia is handmade, and they are running out of labour,” he said.
“We are confident that there’s great integration. We’ve got crew on the Virginias – there’s no problem at a military-to-military or bureaucracy-to-bureaucracy level. It’s just a question of whether they can actually build the Virginias.”
Former US Navy Secretary Richard Spencer, the chair of Perth-based shipbuilder Austal, said last week the Australian and US governments were moving too slowly on AUKUS.
Mr Hegseth’s praise for Australia at the Shangri-La Dialogue was in stark contrast to his admonishment of other US allies, lashing those who sought to “free ride” on America.
“The era of the United States subsidising the defence of wealthy nations is over,” he said.
Mr Marles used his speech to the region’s premier defence conference to warn a surge in damage to subsea cables had transformed the seabed into a “battlefield”.
He urged greater transparency from Beijing around its maritime operations and tighter international controls over “shadow fleet” vessels.
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation/the-nuclear-substitutes-pressure-mounts-with-aukus-subs-deadline/news-story/9f4537a4c6a7d6bc78ed892f11d58a6f
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d0bc64 No.24665951
>>24512238 (pb)
>>24660508
>>24663282
>>24663375
>>24663327
COMMENTARY: PM must be honest about depth of US defence alliance
PETER JENNINGS - 1 June 2026
1/2
The submarine announcements made in Singapore show that Australia and the US are preparing to fight together should deterrence fail in the Indo-Pacific.
This is the strategic logic of AUKUS. It is also a tale of two technologies – old submarines and new unmanned vessels. We are putting more money and priority on old subs, but the new technology is potentially the war winner.
In public comments before meeting his US and British counterparts, Defence Minister Richard Marles claimed “the biggest leap in Australia’s military capability in more than a century” will be realised, if and when in the 2040s nuclear-powered submarines will be built in Adelaide.
The Defence Minister did not mention a big concession Australia has made to the US, which is that we will not, in the interim, receive newly built Virginia-class submarines in the 2030s.
One had to read deep into the AUKUS joint statement to discover that, in an effort to simplify “supply chain management, operational and maintenance requirements, and maximising cost efficiencies”, Australia will take three in-service Virginia-class subs “in lieu of a mixture of new and in-service VCS variants”.
Virginia-class submarines are designed around life-of-ship nuclear reactor cores intended to operate for roughly 33 years without refuelling.
The current plan is that Australia will receive the first Virginia submarine in 2032, the second in 2035 and third in 2038. They are meant to be so-called block IV boats, the first of which is the USS Vermont, commissioned in 2020 with an expected life to 2053. If the Vermont were to transition to the Royal Australian Navy in 2032, we could plan for at best 21 years of remaining service life.
The block IV Virginias are designed to have three major overhauls in their service lives, during which time they’ll be out of the water for an extended period. Will our boats arrive needing an extended refit or will the US have done the scheduled major overhaul before delivery? The answer to that question involves tens of billions of dollars in cost and time.
The decision to receive second-hand Virginia boats may well be the right strategy for Australia. We can at least be assured that the design is good and the boats are fit for purpose.
An even more significant announcement from the AUKUS ministers in Singapore was that of the “first AUKUS Pillar II Signature Project: developing cutting-edge payloads” for uncrewed undersea vehicles.
The joint statement said these payloads would “protect critical national seabed infrastructure; deploy cutting-edge surveillance, reconnaissance and strike capabilities; conduct logistics operations, and; bolster superiority in anti-submarine and anti-surface warfare, mine countermeasures, electronic warfare, and contested littoral manoeuvre”.
(continued)
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d0bc64 No.24665954
>>24665951
2/2
The most interesting force structure development in the past half decade has been the design and delivery of the greyhound bus-sized Ghost Shark UUV.
This has been a project delivered at lightning speed involving innovation driven by the private sector and produced on a greenfield factory site in Sydney, with the first Ghost Sharks already in service. The project represents everything defence procurement is not: fast, innovative, creative and relatively low-cost.
Looking at Ghost Shark, one wonders if Australia will ever again build crewed submarines. By the time Australia hopes to build SSN-AUKUS boats in the 2040s, autonomous underwater systems will be doing much of the work we now assign to crewed vessels.
If the payloads for Ghost Shark arrive as advertised in 2027, that is an important and valuable development and one that will worry the hell out of the Chinese. Australians are too distracted by Donald Trump’s Truth Social posts. In terms of defence engagement in Asia there is an impressive story to tell. The US continues to deepen and strengthen defence ties with South Korea, Japan, The Philippines and indeed Australia. A lot of focused effort is leading to important change.
Speaking at the Shangri La dialogue, US Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth spoke in positive terms about America’s Asian allies “stepping up” to do more on defence.
Hegseth’s surprisingly benign comment on Australia was: “Together, we are expanding the rotational presence of US forces and collaborating to ensure our defence-industrial base build and sustain weapons required for a high-end fight. We appreciate Australia’s investment in real combat power and the commitment to integrate more deeply with the US joint force.”
Hegseth’s speech put a powerful case for closer alliances in the guise of “America First” language. Note the phrases “high-end fight” and “integrate more deeply”. Marles understands this, but he and Anthony Albanese are not coming clean with the Australian public about what this really means.
Since the announcement of the US Marine Corps deployments to northern Australia in 2011, the alliance co-operation story has been about building a shared defence-industrial base and establishing the foundations for closer American and Australian military integration.
Australia’s US alliance is not just an add-on to our defence planning, it is absolutely central to how we think about defending the country. But this is coming at a time when Australian trust of the US alliance is at its lowest, seemingly because of a dislike of President Trump. We need to set aside the emotional reactions to Trump and focus instead on a clear-eyed assessment of our security needs.
Australia has no exit strategy from its own region and no credible defence plan beyond the US alliance. It is increasingly critical for the government to explain this reality to the Australian people.
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/commentary/pm-must-be-honest-about-depth-of-us-defence-alliance/news-story/1f65bdc99315a05a9c41f104b759c7cc
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d0bc64 No.24665967
YouTube embed. Click thumbnail to play.
>>24621717
>>24648353
>>24653712
>>24653721
‘ISIS bride’ accused of trying to indoctrinate children into terrorism before return to Australia
Erin Pearson - June 1, 2026
1/2
A so-called ISIS bride tried to indoctrinate her own children into radical views and encouraged other Australians to travel to Syria but has since renounced violent jihad, a court has heard.
However, Rayann El Houli, 34, has not completed any anti-terror programs in the eight months she has been back in Australia, because it was “a bit much” for her, Melbourne Magistrates’ Court was told.
El Houli, of Broadmeadows in Melbourne’s north, appeared in court on Monday charged with terrorism offences.
She is accused of travelling to Syria and entering or remaining in declared areas, and being a member of a terrorist organisation. Police oppose her bid for bail.
Defence barrister Peter Morrissey, SC, said his client returned to Australia knowing she might be charged, but she has renounced ISIS and violent jihad, and wants nothing to do with them directly or indirectly for herself or those she loves.
Morrissey said El Houli preferred to dress in traditional Muslim attire but came to court on Monday without it on as an “act of good faith” to allow the magistrate to see her “face to face”.
“She’s prepared to submit to the court in that way. To be seen, to be recognised,” Morrissey said.
El Houli had appeared in court for a filing hearing on Thursday wearing a niqab, a full-face covering with only her eyes visible.
The court heard the allegations in the police summary included that the 34-year-old intentionally travelled to Syria to join Islamic State and accept the benefits of being a member.
Police allege that while she was there, she married a number of members and expressed radicalised views and support for terrorist acts including martyrdom.
Chief Magistrate Lisa Hannan said El Houli was also accused of expressing support for the killing of non-believers, sought to indoctrinate her children in radical views, and tried to get other Australians to go to Syria to follow ISIS.
El Houli later left Raqqa, in Syria, when the caliphate was defeated, “not as a result of changing views”, the court heard.
Hannan questioned why El Houli had not participated in anti-terrorism programs since returning to Australia, highlighting there was a “void” of evidence regarding what happened while the accused was in a camp abroad.
Hannan also said there was no evidence about how El Houli escaped the camp and was smuggled out of Syria, or who helped and paid for this.
“There would need to be … some evidence in that regard because based on what I’ve read from the summary, the views expressed in the charges are extremely concerning,” the chief magistrate said.
“Terrorism is much harder to address, monitor and assess than, for example, someone addicted to drugs. These are very serious charges. The risk is serious indeed.”
(continued)
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d0bc64 No.24665968
>>24665967
2/2
Morrissey said his client had not undertaken anti-terrorism programs since her return as the process was all “a bit much” for her.
“She saw a law-abiding, loving household as the way forward for her children and herself. She’s a highly traumatised individual,” he said. “She indicates she’s most prepared to undertake that program and any others. She is able and willing to engage in any way required.”
Morrissey said he hoped a risk assessment report could be produced to the court from a psychologist, but this could take time and his client was eager to apply for bail to be with her children.
The court heard El Houli had recently developed significant health problems including a possible diagnosis of multiple sclerosis.
The prosecution opposed bail, arguing there would be a real risk to the community if El Houli were released.
El Houli was charged on May 28 after returning to Australia on September 26 last year with another woman.
Australian Federal Police Deputy Commissioner Hilda Sirec told a press conference in Canberra last week that an investigation into the second woman was continuing, as well as an investigation into “all the women that returned recently”.
When asked why Operation Kurrajong, launched in 2015 into Australian citizens overseas with links to Islamic State, had taken so long to secure El Houli’s arrest, Sirec said: “These are highly complex matters.”
“We need to be able to take the time and effort to make sure that the evidence is admissible and to a legal standard.”
Hannan adjourned the hearing until psychological reports could be obtained. A committal mention hearing is scheduled for September.
A mother and daughter who were among four women and nine children who arrived in Australia last month after spending years in a refugee camp in north-east Syria will apply for bail later this week on slavery charges.
https://www.theage.com.au/national/victoria/isis-bride-accused-of-trying-to-indoctrinate-children-into-terrorism-before-return-to-australia-20260601-p602px.html
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6htnTAHXG-Q
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d0bc64 No.24665978
>>24648876
‘Bike boy’ saga: Ryan Meuleman fronts court from custody, charged with carjacking
LILY MCCAFFREY - 1 June 2026
“Bike boy” Ryan Meuleman, who is suing former premier Daniel Andrews for defamation, has faced court from custody on an unrelated matter, charged with carjacking and breaching bail.
Mr Meuleman was seriously injured as a teenager in a 2013 collision with a Ford Territory driven by Mr Andrews’ wife, Catherine. Mr Andrews, who was opposition leader at the time, was also in the car.
Mr Meuleman – who became known as “bike boy” – is in the midst of suing the couple in the Federal Court, alleging they defamed him in a 2024 media statement.
Mr Meuleman appeared via video link from custody in Dandenong Magistrates’ Court for the unrelated criminal matter against him on Monday.
Mr Meuleman has been charged with offences relating to carjacking with a child in the car, vehicle theft and breach of bail.
In a brief appearance before Magistrate Frances Medina, lawyer Savannah Westwood from Tony Hargreaves and Partners, successfully applied for an adjournment.
Ms Westwood told the court she had only received funds in trust on Friday so hadn’t yet had the opportunity to properly case conference the matter.
Mr Meuleman, who wore a white T-shirt with his hair cut short, did not speak during the short hearing. Ms Medina adjourned his case for a further mention on June 19.
Mr Meuleman began defamation proceedings against Mr and Ms Andrews in the Federal Court late last year, nearly 13 years on from the collision. He alleged that a media statement issued by the couple in 2024 defamed him.
Mr and Ms Andrews are fighting the claim, and in their defence filed with the court have alleged Mr Meuleman was suing them for publicity and to advance other people’s personal and political agendas. Mr and Ms Andrews have always denied any wrongdoing in relation to the 2013 collision.
Victoria Police investigated the incident and never laid charges.
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation/bike-boy-saga-ryan-meuleman-fronts-court-from-custody-charged-with-carjacking/news-story/d82c2dd7ebd3b6e4c02239dde5ab7113
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d0bc64 No.24667281
>>24415989 (pb)
‘We’re not spies’, Chinese diplomat insists as he calls for closer ties with Australia
In his first Australian interview, Consul General Fang Xinwen has said casting Beijing as a threat to Australia will “backfire”, and warned against missing opportunities in trade and robotics.
Carly Douglas and Stephen Drill - May 30, 2026
Chinese businesspeople and scientists working in Australia are “not spies”, one of the nation’s most senior diplomats says, warning that casting Beijing as a threat to this country will “backfire”.
In his first Australian interview, consul general Fang Xinwen also revealed that China was keen to host more AFL games.
And Mr Fang is promoting the widespread take-up of Chinese-built humanoid robots in Australian households.
Amid Donald Trump’s unending war on Iran, he warned that the world must not return to the “laws of the jungle”.
Mr Fang urged Anthony Albanese to “stay in the same boat” as China, regardless of whether that could undermine our longstanding alliance with the US.
While Australia’s intelligence experts have repeatedly flagged concerns over espionage operations, identifying Chinese businesses and scientists as potential threats, Mr Fang said: “They are not spies, they are here to do business.”
In a face-to-face interview he added that Chinese professionals working in Australia or trying to do business deals often faced too many restrictions.
Mr Fang, the consul general of the People’s Republic of China in Melbourne, said: “We are partners, not rivals. We are friends, not foes.
“There should be a better business environment here.
“I think more and more Chinese businesspeople and investors could be here.”
Mike Burgess, head of Australia’s spy agency ASIO, warned last year that Chinese-backed hackers were trying to sabotage Australia’s water, electricity, internet and mobile phone networks.
In February last year, the Australian government also banned staff from downloading Chinese-owned AI platform DeepSeek.
But Mr Fang insisted there was no need to be “scared” of Chinese investment, claiming China “fully protects the intellectual property rights”.
“We should never go too far or maximise the so-called threat,” he said.
“That kind of a threat will – just like a boomerang – it will go back to hit yourself, or backfire.”
PING-PONG DIPLOMACY
Mr Fang said China wanted to become closer to Australia, suggesting that AFL games could return to Chinese cities such as Shanghai for the first time in five years.
“There are some unique beauty of this game and we can give full support to any training or exhibition or friendship match of the Australian football teams to China,” he said.
“They did the matches some years ago, and we should continue this training. Should there be any club in Victoria who would like to go to China … we will do our best.”
Three AFL clubs – Port Adelaide, Gold Coast Suns and St Kilda – played regular-season premiership matches in China before the Covid pandemic at Jiangwan Stadium in Shanghai.
Mr Fang suggested games could also be played in mid-sized cities, saying if more people understood and watched the game it could really take off in China.
An AFL spokesman said it had no short-term plans to return to China.
With a seeming nod to the 1970s “ping-pong diplomacy” phenomenon that helped open diplomatic relations between Australia and China under the Whitlam government, Mr Fang suggested that more table tennis should also be arranged between Chinese and Australian teams.
He’s so keen on the sport he’s even installed a mini table tennis table in his Melbourne consulate office.
Mr Fang said he would like to see Australia assert its influence with the US and Donald Trump regarding the Iran War. China bought 1.4 million barrels of oil from Tehran each day before the Strait of Hormuz was blockaded.
Amid global fears over the reliability of fuel supplies due to the US-Iran conflict, Mr Fang urged Australia to get more involved in the global effort to persuade the two nations to establish a long-term agreement.
“China and Australia should shoulder the common responsibility or share the tasks to maintain regional and world peace,” Mr Fang said.
“As long as we are in difficult times we should work together and stay in the same boat to combat the storms, and then we can sail smoothly after the difficult time.
“If not, if we just become the onlookers or undoers of this crisis, the impacts will come, definitely.”
His ambitions for a closer relationship with Australia come despite lingering tension over China’s claims to Taiwan, which could result in conflict with the US as soon as next year.
China’s President Xi Jinping told Mr Trump on his visit to Beijing this month that mishandling the question on Taiwan’s independence could lead to a “highly perilous situation”.
(continued)
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d0bc64 No.24667288
>>24667281
2/2
RESTRICTIONS ARE ‘TOO RICH’
Mr Fang also said there was too much bureaucratic meddling in Chinese investment in Australia.
Victoria has close links with China, with Premier Jacinta Allan donning a hard hat and a high-vis vest to inspect tunnel boring machines in Deyang, near Chengdu, during her five-day trade mission in China last September.
Chinese-built TBMs will carve out a passage for Victoria’s controversial Suburban Rail Loop under a $1.7bn deal. Tunnel works will also be carried out under a $6.7bn deal by a consortium led by the Chinese-owned company John Holland. That deal piqued the interest of Australia’s Foreign Investment Review Board, which just last week prompted Treasurer Jim Chalmers to order six Chinese-linked companies to sell their shares in a major Australian rare earth miner.
But Mr Fang said such fears were unfounded, adding that often drawn-out FIRB processes had blocked key Chinese technology over exaggerated and “biased” security concerns.
“There have been many restrictions on the industries or on the areas that the Chinese company could or could not attend,” he said.
“I think the procedure drags long, and restrictions on Chinese companies are too rich sometimes, so many Chinese companies with their unique technical know-how and their good experience cannot come down to Victoria, to Melbourne, for those reasons.”
Victoria’s Belt and Road deal with China – signed by former premier Daniel Andrews who once controversially posed for local media while taking a call in Tiananmen Square – was torpedoed in 2021 by the federal government citing national security concerns.
With more than 450,000 Chinese tourists visiting Victoria last year, Mr Fang welcomed a plan by Premier Jacinta Allan to nearly double that number by 2029.
Ms Allan outlined the plan in Beijing last year as part of her new China Strategy, putting her on a collision course with the federal government over a push to bring thousands more international students to Melbourne.
“The more, the better,” the consul general said.
Mr Fang has forged close ties with Ms Allan, and while he was appointed after Mr Andrews quit politics, it is understood he and other consulate staff have maintained a close relationship with the ex-premier, who has travelled to China regularly for business.
The consul general said he had been working closely with the Allan government to deliver her China Strategy, including shipping Victorian-made products to China.
“I’ve kept close contact with the Premier and the state government and all the officials at different levels,” Mr Fang said.
ROBOTS? WHY NOT?
Chinese consumers remain crucial to Victoria’s economy.
Farmers last year exported $5bn worth of food and fibre to China, our biggest export market.
China is also our biggest import market, with Australians spending $82bn on Chinese goods, driven by spending on electronic equipment, machinery and now cars.
Mr Fang sidestepped any criticism of Victoria, declining to comment on whether racism, housing or crime created issues for Chinese migrants and visitors.
He did, however, share one gentle observation of many visitors – it is too hard to get a coffee after 3pm.
“Should the visitors, Chinese visitors, enjoy a cup of coffee after 2.30 or 3?” Mr Fang said.
“That would be nicer, in my view.”
Mr Fang is also keen to showcase China’s impressive robotics, envisioning human-like robots assisting Australians with their day-to-day tasks at home.
“Why not?” he said.
Chinese technologies are not new to Australia – autonomous lawnmowers and vacuum cleaners are already in many households.
A Chinese humanoid robot set a record for a half marathon in China in April, completing a 21km course in 50min 26sec – seven minutes faster than its human rival.
And Mr Fang hopes more people choose Chinese-built robots, which have already been showcased in Melbourne at tech expos.
“This year, with the updates of the technology, the human androids or some more smarter, clever robots could be brought here,” he said.
Despite widespread trepidation over the use of robots, including long-held fears they may one day take over the paid work of humans, Mr Fang says there is no reason to fear the technology.
“They should not replace humans, but they should be a very helpful hand to lift the burden of the workers and their businesspeople,” he said.
“We are the master of this technology.
“We should not be the slave of this technology.”
https://www.heraldsun.com.au/news/victoria/were-not-spies-chinese-diplomat-insists-as-he-calls-for-closer-ties-with-australia/news-story/dfec0216ed4adb79cd9947a6ad904e7c
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d0bc64 No.24669409
YouTube embed. Click thumbnail to play.
Nurses from ‘kill threat’ video sought out Israelis online, a court has heard
BIMINI PLESSER - 2 June 2026
1/2
An Israeli influencer claims he was targeted by two former Sydney nurses in an online chatroom before he recorded them allegedly threatening to “kill” Israeli patients in a video their lawyers are now seeking to have thrown out of court.
Sarah Abu Lebdeh, 27, and Ahmad Rashad Nadir, 28, made global headlines last year when they were recorded allegedly threatening violence against Israeli patients at Bankstown Hospital in Sydney’s west.
In the two-and-a-half minute video, recorded by Israeli influencer Max Ilinksi – known online as Max Veifer – the former nurses allegedly made a series of violent threats.
Mr Nadir allegedly said, “You (Mr Ilinksi) have no idea how many (Israeli people) come to this hospital … I send to Jahannam”, the Arabic word for “hell”.
Ms Abu Lebdeh told Mr Ilinski he was going to “die the most disgusting death” and, when asked what would happen if an Israeli patient came into the hospital, she said: “I won’t treat them, I will kill them.”
The pair, who are out on bail and have both pleaded not guilty, attended Sydney’s Downing Centre District Court for a pre-trial hearing before Judge Michael McHugh on Monday.
Mr Nadir’s barrister, Greg James KC, argued in court that Mr Ilinksi had used his online platform and expertise to “hunt down, expose and publicise those who laboured under what he considered reminisce conceptions” about Israel, Hamas and the war in Gaza.
By “exposing” these people online, Mr James said Mr Ilinski was “in effect, a propaganda warrior” determined to see people with anti-Israel or antisemitic beliefs lose their jobs or face criminal charges.
Speaking to the court via video link, Mr Ilinski denied targeting specific people on the online chatroom, instead claiming the two accused had targeted him by requesting to be matched with Israeli users.
Mr Ilinski said he only posted the video online “to bring awareness … and warn Jewish communities around the world from things that want to hurt them”.
The content creator said he had worked with authorities in several countries, including Canada and the Netherlands, to see antisemites charged with criminal offences, but his main priority online was “protecting” and “warning” the international Jewish community.
Outside court, Mr Nadir’s solicitor Zemarai Khatiz told reporters his team would move to have the video excluded from evidence on the basis it was recorded without consent.
“It was a private conversation, it was recorded secretly without my client’s consent,” Mr Khatiz said.
(continued)
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d0bc64 No.24669410
>>24669409
2/2
Inside court, Mr James said that, because his client’s alleged statements were made in NSW, the video was recorded, at least in part, in the state and should be subject to local law.
“The conversation occurs in NSW, the sound is captured in NSW, thus recorded if not exclusively, certainly in NSW and the intent was to capture it in NSW,” he said.
Because neither Mr Nadir nor Ms Abu Lebdeh consented to having their “private conversation” recorded, the video was “obtained illegally and it was intended to be used illegally”, he said.
Mr James added that there was “no evidence” to suggest his client should have expected to be overheard or recorded.
“There was no reason for them to expect that Mr Ilinski would have gone worldwide,” he told the court.
As he is “not a lawyer”, Mr Ilinski said he was unaware of the precise rules regarding recording conversations outside of Israel.
In February, Ms Lebdeh pleaded not guilty to threatening violence to a group and using a carriage service to menace, harass or offend.
The 27-year old originally faced three offences, but a charge of using a carriage service to threaten to kill was dropped by prosecutors last September.
Mr Nadir also pleaded not guilty to using a carriage service to menace, harass or offend. He was previously charged with the state offence of possessing a prohibited drug last year, which he pleaded not guilty to in September.
The pair have been stood down from their jobs by NSW Health and issued a two-year ban from working with NDIS participants.
Their trial, set to begin on August 31, is expected to span five days.
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation/nurses-from-kill-threat-video-sought-out-israelis-online-a-court-has-heard/news-story/bbe7a8659ff343196172993ea29ba12c
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bX8Taw04bcw
https://www.instagram.com/reel/DGB7VDnoGDF/
https://qresear.ch/?q=Max+Veifer
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d0bc64 No.24669411
>>24360128 (pb)
>>24447120 (pb)
Malaysia enforces ban on social media for children
Eileen Ng - June 1 2026
Malaysia has begun enforcing rules barring millions of children younger than 16 from social media, joining a global effort to tighten online safety protections for young users.
The rules require social media platforms to implement age-verification systems and block users under 16 from creating accounts. They apply to platforms with at least eight million users, including Facebook, Instagram, TikTok and YouTube.
Companies that fail to comply could face penalties of up to 10 million ringgit ($A3.5 million).
But parents whose children manage to bypass the law will not be penalised.
The government said the measures are aimed at protecting children from harmful content, cyberbullying and platform features designed to encourage excessive use.
Other countries including Australia, Brazil and Indonesia have introduced or announced age-based restrictions or requirements for children’s access to social media.
Countries including Britain, France, Spain, Denmark, Thailand and South Korea are also studying or developing similar approaches.
Malaysia’s Communications and Multimedia Commission said the rules aren’t intended to prevent children from accessing the internet or digital technology.
Instead it set expectations for service providers to address online harms and ensure age-appropriate safeguards are in place.
“These measures help strengthen the protection of children in the online environment, while providing added reassurance to parents in navigating increasingly complex digital risks,” the regulator said in a statement last month.
Platforms will be required to introduce safety-by-design features, including protections against manipulative design that encourages compulsive use, and take action against underage accounts and harmful content.
Technology companies have yet to detail how they will comply with the requirements.
The regulator said a grace period will be given for platforms to complete implementation of age-verification systems.
Clara Koh, Meta’s director of public policy for Southeast Asia, had cautioned in April that Malaysia’s blanket under-16 ban could backfire by driving teenagers away from protected apps and into unregulated corners of the internet.
She said Meta has launched “teen accounts” for those under 18 that limits contact, screen time and exposure to inappropriate content.
Benjamin Loh, social science lecturer at Monash University in Malaysia said experiences elsewhere suggest age-based restrictions have yet to prove consistently effective.
Without parent penalties, he said families can easily bypass the law by creating accounts for their children.
“This is a major gap that unless regulators are willing to fix, will result in the law having little effect in stopping children from using social media,” he added.
https://www.canberratimes.com.au/story/9270197/malaysia-enforces-ban-on-social-media-for-children/
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d0bc64 No.24669413
>>24621731
NRL distances itself from Broncos’ decision to invite Ben Roberts-Smith into dressing sheds
Christian Nicolussi - June 1, 2026
Ben Roberts-Smith’s surprise appearance in the Brisbane Broncos dressing sheds on Sunday afternoon is expected to be a one-off.
The NRL on Monday distanced itself from the Broncos’ decision to allow Roberts-Smith into their inner sanctum following the loss to St George Illawarra.
The former soldier has been charged with multiple war crimes over the alleged murders of unarmed Afghan civilians and prisoners.
He faces a maximum penalty of life imprisonment for each charge. The former SAS corporal has rejected the charges, saying, “I categorically deny all of these allegations”.
Sources with knowledge of the situation not authorised to speak publicly confirmed Roberts-Smith had accompanied his daughters to the Broncos’ game against St George Illawarra after they were invited to attend by the spouse of a club staff member who knows the girls through school connections.
Roberts-Smith, the same sources confirmed, is friends with Broncos welfare officer Adam Walsh, a former SAS soldier with whom he served overseas.
The Broncos refused to comment on the matter, but the sources confirmed Roberts-Smith had not been a guest of the club, did not visit the club’s chairman’s lounge during the game, and that most of the players had no idea he was in their inner sanctum.
The sources added that Roberts-Smith would not be banned from attending future games, but stressed Sunday’s was an impromptu visit and that he had not been invited by the club.
Senior figures at the NRL were unaware Roberts-Smith had been invited into the Broncos’ sheds, but later said it was a matter for the club who they wanted to invite to their dressing room.
When spotted by The Courier Mail in the sheds, Roberts-Smith said on Sunday: “The Broncos invited my daughters today because of all the things they have been through, and we were very grateful.”
Roberts-Smith has been accused of kicking an Afghan civilian off a cliff, and directing a subordinate to execute a man in September 2012. He is also alleged to have executed a prisoner with a prosthetic leg during an Easter Sunday mission in Afghanistan in 2009.
Roberts-Smith’s case has been set down for a brief status mention, an administrative court hearing, on Thursday.
On the field, the Broncos were stunned by the Dragons, who had not won in 295 days. Returning prop Payne Haas was clearly upset by the effort, and told ABC Sport after the game: “We’re all talk at the moment. We keep saying we’re going to do all these important things on the field, but to be honest, we’re BS-ing each other.”
Meanwhile, the Broncos’ hopes of defending their title have been dealt a blow with representative forward Pat Carrigan facing up to a month on the sidelines with a syndesmosis injury that will keep him out of Origin II.
Fellow Maroon Gehamat Shibasaki is out for up to six weeks because of a grade-two MCL injury.
https://www.theage.com.au/sport/nrl/nrl-distances-itself-from-broncos-decision-to-invite-ben-roberts-smith-into-dressing-sheds-20260601-p602o5.html
https://www.news.com.au/sport/nrl/ben-robertssmiths-bizarre-sighting-inside-brisbane-broncos-dressing-room/news-story/b6d2cca990213ebe476e9f69f11a9886
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d0bc64 No.24669417
>>24643186
>>24648147
>>24659794
>>24659807
Antisemitism royal commission rejects federal government's bid to keep cabinet documents confidential
Holly Tregenza - 1 June 2026
The Royal Commission on Antisemitism and Social Cohesion has rejected the federal government's bid to keep cabinet documents about counterterrorism funding secret.
The federal government had made a public interest immunity claim over the documents, which Attorney-General Michelle Rowland defended as standard procedure for matters related to cabinet.
But royal commissioner Virginia Bell found it was in the public interest for the inquiry to access the documents, so it could make a full assessment of whether intelligence and law enforcement agencies did their job in the lead-up to the Bondi terror attack.
The prime minister's department secretary, Steven Kennedy, had argued the cabinet documents should be protected because ministers relied on the assumption their meetings would be confidential.
He said releasing them could result in a lack of "candour" going forward.
But while Ms Bell acknowledged Mr Kennedy's concerns, she said there were "no issue of disclosure to the public or to another party" because only she and those who read her confidential report would ever read the contents.
In her finding, Ms Bell said she had weighed the public interest in disclosure of the documents against the public interest in maintaining confidentiality.
The ruling found the documents were critical to allow the commission to conduct a "thorough examination of the issues raised" in relation to counterterrorism funding.
Ms Bell also said access to the documents would provide a comparison of the resourcing given to counterterrorism before and after August 2024, when the terror threat level was raised to "probable".
"In the context of the antisemitic Bondi terrorist attack on 14 December 2025, the question of whether intelligence and law enforcement agencies performed to maximum effectiveness requires consideration of the priority given to, and the resourcing of, counter-terrorism by each agency," she wrote.
What is in the documents?
The royal commission had sought access to nine documents that included files from the Finance Department and Australian Federal Police, as well as seven cabinet memoranda.
At the heart of these documents is a question of whether the counterterrorism budget declined between 2020 and 2025.
The government had repeatedly insisted that Australia's national security agencies, including ASIO, have had funding increases since Labor came to office in 2022.
In a written submission to the royal commission, spy boss Mike Burgess made clear that ASIO was not asked by the government to shift resources away from counterterrorism.
"ASIO was not directed by any minister between January 1, 2023 and November 2025 to reduce [counterterror] efforts to service other priorities," he said.
"I am not aware of any such decision or direction by any minister to any [intelligence] agency."
https://www.abc.net.au/news/2026-06-01/antisemitism-royal-counterterrorism-bondi-terror-attack/106743974
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d0bc64 No.24669493
YouTube embed. Click thumbnail to play.
>>24611802
>>24663282
Friendly fire: Labor figures question AUKUS commitment
Zac de Silva - June 2 2026
1/2
A Labor MP has broken ranks to call for a rethink of the AUKUS nuclear submarine deal as a former party minister launches a "people's inquiry" into the agreement.
After asking whether Labor's original commitment to the deal still stood during a private caucus meeting in Canberra on Tuesday, Labor backbencher Ed Husic went public with his reservations about the military pact after it was announced Australia would only get second-hand submarines from the US.
"You do wonder whether or not we will get the deal, even the reconfigured one that we have got," Mr Husic told reporters at Parliament House.
Originally, Australia was set to get a mix of new and used Virginia-Class vessels before eventually building its own in Adelaide, but now the defence force will only get used submarines.
Defence Minister Richard Marles defended the move, saying it would make AUKUS simpler and cheaper to deliver, but Mr Husic appeared skeptical of that reasoning.
"In the circumstances he's been placed, he would have to say that," Mr Husic said.
The Labor MP, who was science and industry minister before being ousted from cabinet in 2025 in a factional power play, said Australia needed to be open about the workforce shortages, supply chain challenges and quality issues confronting the AUKUS pact.
Mr Husic has previously broken with his colleagues on the recognition of a Palestinian state, the war in Gaza and taxation of gas.
Husic's comments came as former Labor minister and Midnight Oil frontman Peter Garrett on Tuesday announced plans to lead a "people's inquiry" into AUKUS, investigating the implications of the pact for the nation's security.
The crowdfunded probe, run separately from the government, will look into whether the vessels will make Australia more secure, the storage of nuclear waste and potential long-term strategic consequences, the former environment minister said.
"This is not a royal commission, this is a people's inquiry," Mr Garrett told reporters in Canberra on Tuesday.
(continued)
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d0bc64 No.24669495
>>24669493
2/2
Mr Garrett said he hoped the government would be among those presenting to the inquiry and welcomed submissions from people with a range of political views.
"The AUKUS decision is the most momentous and expensive decision ever made by any Australia government in the modern era," he said.
The rock star turned politician has named retired admiral Chris Barrie, former WA premier Carmen Lawrence, Yankunytjatjara woman Karina Lester and Australia Institute co-chief executive Leanne Minshull as "commissioners'' for the probe.
Mr Barrie, who was chief of the defence force between 1998 and 2002, said it was important to have a thorough look at Australia's defence commitments and its alliance with the US and UK.
"My fear … is that the kinds of expenditures, and the kinds of workforce, and the way in which we would go about supporting something like AUKUS, might drain other parts of our defence force," he said.
Asked about Mr Husic's contribution during Labor's caucus meeting, Treasurer Jim Chalmers would not be drawn.
"We support the AUKUS arrangements, and I don't get into the details of discussions in the parliamentary party," he told reporters in Canberra.
Western Australian Labor MP Josh Wilson has also previously raised questions about the nuclear submarine deal.
https://www.canberratimes.com.au/story/9277320/friendly-fire-labor-figures-question-aukus-commitment/
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4Vo13CcVoRI
https://austpeaceandsecurityforum.org.au/
https://aukuspublicinquiry.netlify.app/
https://chuffed.org/project/173009-public-inquiry-into-aukus
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d0bc64 No.24669503
>>24611802
>>24663282
>>24669493
‘Where’s the plan B?’: Ed Husic goes nuclear on AUKUS
Matthew Knott - June 2, 2026
Former Labor cabinet minister Ed Husic has broken ranks to call for a rethink of the AUKUS pact after the revelation the United States only plans to sell Australia second-hand nuclear-powered submarines.
Husic’s intervention in a caucus meeting on Tuesday came as former Labor minister Peter Garrett and former defence force chief Chris Barrie announced they would lead a crowd-funded inquiry into AUKUS, labelling the $368 billion project as “controversial and secretive”.
Husic, who served as industry minister until he was demoted to the backbench in a reshuffle last May, joined calls for the government to develop a “Plan B” in case the promised submarines do not arrive as promised.
The Coalition said the comments revealed division within Labor about AUKUS and called for Prime Minister Anthony Albanese to enforce discipline within his caucus.
“You do wonder whether or not we will get the deal, even the reconfigured one that we have got,” Husic told reporters at Parliament House.
Earlier, during Labor’s caucus meeting, he questioned whether the original caucus vote on AUKUS was valid given the changes to the scheme.
“That deal versus what we’ve got now are different,” Husic said.
“I think that it now gives us a moment to think about whether or not the deal should be reconfigured, or what are the contingencies.”
Asking “what’s the plan B?” Husic said he was concerned sluggish American submarine production rates meant the US would not have any to spare for Australia.
“You’ve seen within the broader [Labor] movement a general disquiet about the nature of the deal itself,” Husic said.
“But putting all that aside, there’s an issue about reality confronting us about whether or not we will even get the new deal that has been put to us.”
The AUKUS defence ministers announced over the weekend that Australia would now acquire three second-hand submarines from the US rather than two used and one new submarine as originally planned.
Defence Minister Richard Marles said the shift would reduce complexity and save money for taxpayers.
“I’d imagine that in the circumstances he’s been placed, he would have to say that,” Husic replied.
He said he was also concerned about what US President Donald Trump could ask in return from Australia for backing AUKUS.
Opposition defence spokesman James Paterson said Albanese was facing a “full-on Labor revolt” when it comes to Australia’s signature defence policy, accusing Husic of launching “a direct challenge to the authority of the Deputy Prime Minister Richard Marles”.
“It’s a result of Labor’s mismanagement of the delivery of AUKUS and Richard Marles’ failure, along with the prime minister, to make the case for AUKUS,” Paterson said.
Senior Labor sources have privately insisted the government originally preferred to acquire three submarines of the same type, even if the ultimate impetus for the change was a review last year by senior Pentagon official and AUKUS sceptic Elbridge Colby.
Former Labor defence minister Joel Fitzgibbon said the change to all second-hand submarines reinforced that AUKUS was a “big, expensive, challenging project”.
“There are going to be bumps along the way and we have to expect that,” he said.
Garrett, a long-time anti-nuclear campaigner who has previously blasted the AUKUS pact, said a public inquiry was needed because it is “the most momentous and expensive decision ever made by any Australian government in the modern era”.
The inquiry, funded by donations from the public, will hold public hearings and receive submissions.
Barrie, who led the defence force from 1998 to 2002, said he had previously supported Australia acquiring nuclear-powered submarines, but he now had “serious concerns” about AUKUS, including that it could draw Australia into a war with China.
Independent MP Monique Ryan joined fellow crossbenchers to demand more scrutiny of the AUKUS pact.
“It’s a national embarrassment that a former Labor minister is crowdfunding for an independent inquiry into AUKUS,” Ryan said.
Perth MP Josh Wilson was previously the only Labor MP to speak out against AUKUS, arguing in the lead-up to the last election that he believed acquiring nuclear-powered submarines was “not in the national interest”.
“We have embarked on an excruciatingly long, complex, fraught and costly endeavour that, in my view, remains substantially unexplained and unjustified,” he wrote for the Foreign Affairs journal in 2024.
He has since been promoted to the front bench, limiting his ability to speak out.
https://www.theage.com.au/politics/federal/where-s-the-plan-b-ed-husic-goes-nuclear-on-aukus-20260602-p6036f.html
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d0bc64 No.24669511
>>24611802
>>24663282
>>24669493
Joe Courtney says AUKUS changes will still serve Australia well
JOE KELLY - 2 June 2026
1/2
Joe Courtney, co-chair of the Friends of Australia caucus in the US congress, says the fundamentals of the trilateral security partnership remain “very strong” despite proposed changes to the expected mix of Virginia-class submarines to be sold to Australia.
The leading congressional champion for the AUKUS partnership said it was his “expectation” that Australia would now receive three in-service Block IV Virginia-class submarines under the AUKUS arrangements.
His discussions with US Navy leadership led him to conclude that Virginia-class submarines from earlier blocks would not be sold because they were too far into their service lives and America was committed to providing Canberra with a long-lasting capability.
Mr Courtney also welcomed the AUKUS Defence Ministers’ announcement on May 30, which unveiled the first AUKUS Pillar II signature project: the development of uncrewed undersea vehicles, with delivery starting in 2027.
He argued the uncrewed vessels would free up crewed submarines for higher-priority missions. However, on Pillar II, Mr Courtney warned there had been “a ton of frustration about the fact that nobody knows who is in charge”.
He personally felt it should still have a “much stronger centre of gravity” and stressed it was important “to really get Pillar II much more institutionalised so that people actually know who to contact in terms of trying to get the benefits of that part of AUKUS.”
The Pentagon also told The Australian it remained fully committed to delivering Virginia-class submarines to Australia under the AUKUS security partnership, arguing the proposal to provide three in-service Virginia-class submarines was “intended to simplify Australian operation and sustainment”. This would have benefits across a range of areas including “workforce training, maintenance, supply chain management, and operational activities”.
The Pentagon said it would also create “cost efficiencies”, while “putting the program on the strongest possible footing.”
“The United States remains committed to delivering AUKUS and supporting Australia’s acquisition of a conventionally armed, nuclear-powered submarine capability,” the spokesperson said.
“As reflected in the May 30 AUKUS Defence Ministers’ Meeting Joint Statement, the proposed approach would streamline Australia’s acquisition of Virginia-class submarines by enabling the acquisition of three in-service submarines in lieu of a mix of new and in-service variants.”
Mr Courtney said it was now his expectation that Australia would receive three in-service Block IV Virginia-class submarines, rather than a package that included a future Block VII boat.
But Mr Courtney, the ranking Democrat on the House Seapower and Projection Forces Subcommittee, stressed this would not necessarily result in a significantly shorter service life for Australia’s proposed nuclear submarine fleet.
“It’s important to begin with the basics,” he said. “Which is that a Virginia sub has a 33-year lifespan. There’s just no question that if you are careful in terms of (the) operation of a submarine, the service life can be longer than 33 years,” he said. “That’s important to begin the conversation.”
(continued)
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d0bc64 No.24669513
>>24669511
2/2
Block IV Virginia-class submarines first started to enter service in 2020 and continue to be commissioned, with new boats joining the fleet in 2024, 2025 and 2026.
With the first submarine due to be sold to Australia in 2032, Mr Courtney said it was a question of doing the math. “You’re going to have … a very significant service life,” he said.
“Some might pose different scenarios where you are taking older Virginia-class subs from prior blocks but my conversations with US Navy leadership is that they are definitely committed to making sure that Australia gets a good in-service submarine that is going to be usable for certainly the majority of the service life of the submarine. Submarines from earlier blocks would be really starting to get on the back-end of their service life. I don’t see this as some huge modification.”
Mr Courtney who represents Groton, Connecticut, home to General Dynamics Electric Boat – the primary builder of Virginia and Columbia-class submarines – said that by the end of the 2030s the production, delivery and cadence of Virginia-class submarines would be “a lot more robust”.
He said it was his firm belief that the US Navy was “committed to giving Australia high-quality nuclear powered submarines that are going to be a real solution to that submarine (capability) gap.”
He also said the proposed change could present advantages for Australia, especially with US nuclear submarine rotations beginning at HMAS Stirling in Perth from 2027.
“I do think that there’s going to be some real rhythm and muscle memory that’s going to be building up in terms of the submarines that will be in that block cohort coming through Perth and on a regular basis,” he said.
A Pentagon spokesman told The Australian that existing statutory authorities passed by the US congress would continue to “govern the requirements and preconditions for any submarine transfer to Australia and AUKUS”.
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation/defence/joe-courtney-says-aukus-changes-will-still-serve-australia-well/news-story/e2929fa8e127e3993ecc5362eebfc97b
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d0bc64 No.24669518
>>24611309
>>24611677
>>24616846
>>24618462
Jewish leader warns ‘blue collar’ activist group is a sinister ‘neo-Nazi front’
DAMON JOHNSTON - June 01, 2026
A Jewish community leader has raised concerns that a Melbourne group dedicated to “blue-collar activism” is a front organisation for white-supremacy supporters.
Anti-Defamation Commission chair Dvir Abramovich fears the National Workers Alliance, which has recently launched a recruiting drive, has an antisemitic agenda. Dr Abramovich said NWA activists were distributing recruiting pamphlets calling on people to “join our active club” if they are “from the working class, a producer not a parasite (and) family orientated”.
“The National Workers Alliance pamphlet is one of the most sophisticated and sinister examples white-supremacy rebranding and disguise I have seen,” he told The Australian.
“This group has studied precisely how previous neo-Nazi organisations in Australia were exposed and designated as a terrorist organisation and has built a sophisticated layer of plausible deniability designed to survive that scrutiny.
“The playbook is simple and it is chilling. Take the raw ugliness of hate, wrap it in the language of the working man, add a fitness culture, a sense of brotherhood, a glossy logo, and a list of policy positions that sound almost reasonable on the surface.
“Then let the pipeline do its work by drawing people in through the legitimate-sounding front door and walking them, step by step, toward the ideology that was always waiting at the end of the corridor.”
The NWA was formed several years ago, has organised rallies and declares that “nationalism is rising” in its promotional material and social media accounts.
It has rejected any links or association to the neo-Nazi movement. “We are a standalone movement and are not associated with neo-Nazi organisations,” an NWA spokesman said. “I have never been a member of any neo-Nazi organisations.”
The spokesman described the group as “an organisation that is from the working class and believes that it is healthy for young men to have a sense of brotherhood and to become involved in a fitness culture”. He challenged “anyone to find anything hateful” about the group. The NWA said “white supremacy” was a term that “plays on emotion and implies evil”. “We are not rebranding or … in disguise, we are simply an organisation that advocates for people of European descent,” the he said.
The NWA’s pamphlet says the group holds “vetting” nights every Tuesday and its website asks would-be members to submit an application via email before they’re provided with details of the location of the meeting.
“The National Workers Alliance is an Australian nationalist organisation with the following aims: Preserve European culture and identity, stop immigration (and) withdraw from the UN,” the group’s pamphlet states.
The group’s website, which uses imagery of Australian soldiers from World War I, reinforces its “mission” is to “preserve Western culture and identity”. NWA has more than 7000 followers on Facebook.
“Western countries have been demoralised for decades and taught to believe that their culture, identity and history are not a source of pride. People of European ancestry built the most successful and desired societies in history,” its website declares.
The NWA website calls for an end to immigration and links it to a range of issues including crime, housing shortages, cost of living, and loss of national identity. It states that it has caused “less social cohesion, more division, less civic engagement” and declares that “diversity is not a strength”.
Victoria Police confirmed it had deployed officers to East Melbourne on May 23 after reports of men with banners and flags gathering. Police said the men had left the area, at the corner of Vale and Berry streets, when officers arrived. “There have been no further reports, and no offences have been detected,” a police spokesperson said.
Police have analysed the NWA pamphlet and said it had been determined it did not constitute a criminal offence. But police confirmed they keep a close eye on a range of far-right groups.
Dr Abramovich said the National Workers Alliance’s name echoed the Nazis’ National Socialist German Workers’ Party. “That is not an accident,” he said, adding: “The pamphlet uses the phrase ‘a producer not a parasite’, wording drawn directly from the documented language of Nazi propaganda. Their ‘vetting nights’ and ‘fitness requirements’ are the recruitment tools of a paramilitary organisation, not a community group.”
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation/jewish-leader-warns-blue-collar-activist-group-is-a-sinister-neonazi-front/news-story/b5621ed0fd286c9faef6e719b8214e48
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d0bc64 No.24669535
>>24599858
>>24659895
Boy, 13, accused of plotting school massacre is first charged under new Queensland law
MACKENZIE SCOTT and JON MENDELSOHN - 2 June 2026
A 13-year-old boy inspired by online videos of Russian school shooters and stabbing videos had “imminent plans” to kill young children at a Queensland school, and had purchased clothing from webstore Temu to dress like them, police allege.
The boy, from Maryborough on Queensland’s Fraser Coast, was arrested on Thursday after allegedly entering a petrol station with a balaclava around 9am with a large knife and threatening an employee.
He was released following a police interview, with detectives executing a warrant at the boy’s home on Saturday after the detectives from the counter-terrorism unit reviewed the service station CCTV footage.
During the search, police allegedly uncovered electronic devices that had a recorded video from the livestream of the New Zealand mosque massacre.
The Courier-Mail reported that a Maryborough court heard the boy had allegedly planned to target children “who he deemed to be small and easy targets”.
He was later arrested by detectives from the Counter Terrorism Investigation Group and charged with one count each of preparation or planning to cause death or grievous bodily harm and possessing or controlling violent extremist material obtained or accessed using a carriage of service.
Queensland Police Acting Detective Superintendent Jason Hindmarsh on Monday said the boy’s actions “did involve a threat to a local school”.
“We’re in a very early process of reviewing these devices, but we do have evidence that there was planning towards death and GBH (grievous bodily harm),” Superintendent Hindmarsh said.
“We’ve got evidence to satisfy our evidentiary standards that he had planned to undertake acts of violence at a school.
“I can’t give any specific details, but there was a threat to the school, and particularly young people at that school.”
The 13-year-old boy was not known to police, and early indications suggest there were no ideological underpinnings to the plan.
Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Legal Service defence solicitor Clem van der Weegen tried unsuccessfully to have both charges dismissed, with The Courier-Mail reporting he told the court that the boy was a “child of trauma” who was at the service station “looking for kids to play with”.
Superintendent Hindmarsh said police were not alleging he planned to undertake a terrorist attack, adding counter-terrorism experts were engaged because of new laws passed by the Crisafulli Liberal National Party government in response to the Bondi massacre in December.
The legislation amended several existing laws to deliver tougher penalties for hate speech, terrorism-related activities and firearm offences. Among the amendments was the introduction of a new offence under the Criminal Code that prohibits acts done in preparation for, or planning, an offence likely to cause the death or grievous bodily harm of another.
“This is the first prosecution in Queensland for this new offence,” Superintendent Hindmarsh confirmed. “If we do identify a terrorism aspect to it, we will investigate that.”
The teenager has been remanded in custody and is expected to reappear in the Hervey Bay Children’s Court on June 5.
Counter-terrorism investigators will continue their investigation in Maryborough on Tuesday. There is no ongoing threat to the community.
“We just want to reassure the community that we will work with our partners to ensure the safety of all Queenslanders,” Superintendent Hindmarsh said.
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation/teenager-accused-of-plotting-attack-on-children-at-queensland-school/news-story/6310940021a74edcb09efb61528cc8b6
https://mypolice.qld.gov.au/news/2026/06/01/violent-extremist-material-charges-maryborough/
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d0bc64 No.24669538
>>24621731
Ben Roberts-Smith faces three-month delay in seeing war crimes allegations
BIMINI PLESSER - 2 June 2026
Alleged war criminal Ben Roberts-Smith will have to wait three months before seeing the full suite of allegations levelled against him due to national security concerns.
Mr Roberts-Smith was arrested and charged with five counts of war crime murder in April, crimes he allegedly committed between 2009 and 2012 against unarmed detainees during his service in Afghanistan with the SAS.
The full brief of evidence against him was scheduled to be served on Tuesday, but national security concerns have stalled proceedings.
The National Security Information Act has been invoked in Mr Roberts-Smith’s case, meaning the commonwealth has flagged that the disclosure of certain evidence or information could prejudice Australia’s national security.
Commonwealth lawyers on Tuesday told the Downing Centre Local Court orders had to be made under the NSI Act before the brief of evidence could be served, and asked to schedule a hearing for that matter later in the year.
Mr Roberts-Smith was not present in court but his legal team, headed by solicitor Karen Espiner, said they expected to consent to the commonwealth’s proposed orders.
A hearing to make orders under the NSI Act was set for September 1. The brief of evidence against Mr Roberts-Smith will be served one week later, on September 8. The former soldier, who is currently out on bail, will not attend either hearing.
Mr Roberts-Smith is subject to strict conditions while on bail, including a $250,000 surety and the surrender of his passport. He must report to police three times a week, cannot leave Australia, and cannot leave Queensland except to travel to Sydney or Perth for the case.
He is not permitted to approach anyone he served with in Afghanistan or access firearms.
Mr Roberts-Smith was also barred from using any encrypted messaging or video platforms, but Judge Allen on Monday amended the bail conditions, granting him access to video call services such as FaceTime and Zoom.
The procedural delays in his case mean Mr Roberts-Smith will not be able to access the full list of allegations made against him for another three months.
He has denied any wrongdoing, and previous findings against him in a defamation case have only been made to the civil standard of the balance of probabilities.
It is unclear what exactly will be included in the brief of evidence against him, but it is understood that the indemnified testimony of Australian soldiers who served alongside Mr Roberts-Smith will play a significant role in the commonwealth’s case.
Shortly after his arrest, prosecutors revealed that four soldiers who admitted complicity in Mr Roberts-Smith’s alleged war crimes had been granted immunity from prosecution in exchange for their evidence against him.
These witnesses’ identities are protected by non-publication orders.
Last month, Judge Michael Allen condemned attempts by the public to identify and “hunt down” the four “crucial” witnesses.
Judge Allen said all witnesses must be able to deliver their evidence “without fear of repercussions or … pressure from the public which may impact their health and wellbeing”.
“(Mr Roberts-Smith) is absolutely entitled to have a fair trial, and the crown … is entitled to present its case without public threats, harassment and menace to its crucial witnesses,” he said.
If the key witnesses were publicly identified, Judge Allen believed there was a “real risk” one or more of them would become “unwilling and unable” to give evidence.
Mr Roberts-Smith’s war crimes trial is unlikely to reach the NSW Supreme Court until at least 2029.
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation/ben-robertssmith-faces-threemonth-delay-in-seeing-war-crimes-allegations/news-story/49d4baa1c963c3db6850e39d37436484
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d0bc64 No.24669543
>>24636188
>>24649783
Anthony Albanese on a Solomons mission to catch new PM Matthew Wale as China circles
BEN PACKHAM and SARAH ISON - 1 June 2026
1/2
The Albanese government is pulling out all stops for Solomon Islands Prime Minister Matthew Wale’s first official visit to Canberra, with China’s growing influence in the Pacific set to dominate days of “frank” and “sensitive” talks with Anthony Albanese and his senior ministers.
Mr Wale has a packed schedule following his arrival in Canberra late on Monday, including meetings with Mr Albanese, lunches with Foreign Minister Penny Wong and Defence Minister Richard Marles, and briefings with senior Department of Foreign Affairs officials.
He will also receive a full ceremonial welcome at Parliament House on Wednesday and address the media with Mr Albanese before dining with the Prime Minister at The Lodge.
Mr Wale is travelling with six of his top ministers, including Finance Minister Gordon Lilio, Foreign Minister Rick Houenipwela, National Planning Minister Peter Kenilorea, and Infrastructure Minister Ricky Fuo’o, who will sit in on key meetings.
The diplomatic charm offensive underscores hopes in Canberra that Mr Wale will shift his country’s foreign policy to prioritise ties with Australia over those with Beijing. Solomon Islands has been one of the Pacific’s most pro-China countries since it ditched diplomatic ties with Taiwan in 2019, signing a controversial security pact with Beijing in 2022 under former prime minister Manesseh Sogavare.
Senator Wong said after Mr Wale was elected last month that Australia was interested in upgrading security ties with Honiara and declared Australia’s “job will never be done” in countering Chinese influence in the Pacific.
Former Australian high commissioner to Solomon Islands James Batley said the government would be “pretty frank” with Mr Wale over the security implications of China’s activities in the Pacific.
“Australian officials would be talking to him about our perception of the broader regional picture and our assessment of what China means certainly for our national security and, by extension, for Solomon Islands as well,” he said. “I think that would be part of the conversation and obviously that involves some pretty serious or sensitive discussions.
“(The government is) not going to be saying, ‘You have to do this, you have to do that’. But I think we would want to be having a pretty frank discussion to say, ‘This is where we come from. And this is why and we’re very keen for you to understand that’.”
While the Solomon Islands would always have a relationship with China, a significant economic and aid partner, Mr Batley said Mr Wale would be briefed on the risks around collaborating with Beijing on security.
He said it was an “open question” whether the new Solomons’ Prime Minister would limit security co-operation with China or roll it back.
“Wale is under no obligation to have Chinese police trainers in the country, but … those are political judgments that he would have to make,” the former diplomat said.
He said it was striking that Mr Wale, who was elected by MPs after his predecessor Jeremiah Manele was ousted in a no-confidence vote, was visiting Australia so soon after being elected.
“I think clearly (he is) sending a signal to the Australian government on the importance of the relationship,” Mr Batley said.
(continued)
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d0bc64 No.24669545
>>24669543
2/2
The Australian revealed last year that Chinese police in Solomon Islands were fingerprinting residents and getting them to fill out household registration cards under the guise of “community policing”.
Their presence in the country has complicated Australia’s longstanding policing support for Solomon Islands and future assistance under a $190m commitment to build a new police academy in Honiara and provincial policing posts. Mr Albanese said last week that Mr Wale would be “a most honoured guest”.
“It says a lot that the first international visit which he is choosing to make is here in Australia,” he told parliament.
“Despite the global challenges that we confront, we recognise that we’ll be stronger if we face these things together. The challenge of dealing with climate change; the challenge of dealing with security issues in our region.”
Mr Wale opposed his country’s security deal with Beijing but stopped short of saying he would overturn the agreement.
Labor is poised to sign a new security and economic treaty with Fiji but has faced pushback over a proposed security deal with Vanuatu, which is also negotiating a new bilateral agreement with China.
Senator Wong told The Australian last month: “We’re ramping up our efforts in the Pacific. Why are we doing that? It’s because it’s the region where Australia’s interests are most on the line.”
China has been quietly expanding its regional influence through critical infrastructure projects, delivering 17 airports, six ports, and 14 information technology hubs to Pacific Island countries.
Mr Marles also issued a warned over the weekend over damage to subsea cables attributed to China, pointing to five separate cases of cables being cut in the Taiwan Strait in the past 18 months.
“Maybe these were accidents. But even if they were, it highlights the vulnerability of this crucial part of the globe’s infrastructure,” Mr Marles told the Shangri-La Dialogue in Singapore.
“If they were intentional, we are left to wonder: are countries testing our response times, testing our attribution thresholds and testing our political will to respond?”
He called on Beijing, which has a huge shadow fleet, to make a “commitment to transparency around its maritime operations”.
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation/politics/anthony-albanese-on-a-solomons-mission-to-catch-new-pm-matthew-wale-as-china-circles/news-story/cac15595638a9a40beaab13de8a41134
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d0bc64 No.24672912
Prosecutors drop one charge against ex-shock jock Alan Jones
STEVE ZEMEK - June 02, 2026
Prosecutors have withdrawn one charge against Alan Jones as he prepares to battle indecent assault and sexual touching allegations in a blockbuster trial later this year.
Mr Jones, 84, had previously pleaded not guilty to 27 charges - 25 counts of indecent assault and two counts of sexual touching - relating to nine alleged victims between 2009 and 2020.
However the number of charges he will face at trial was whittled down in Sydney’s Downing Centre Local Court on Tuesday as prosecutors withdrew a count of indecent assault relating to one complainant.
“There are proceedings being discontinued, this happened overnight,” Mr Jones’ solicitor Bryan Wrench told the court on Tuesday.
The charge withdrawn on Tuesday related to an allegation that Mr Jones touched and grabbed the person, who can be known only as “Complainant K”, on the bottom at an event in Tamworth in 2013.
No reason was given in court as to why it was being withdrawn.
It means Mr Jones will only face charges relating to eight alleged victims when he faces a Local Court hearing, which is scheduled to begin in August and is anticipated to run for four months.
According to court documents, the alleged offences occurred in Sydney, Fitzroy Falls, Kiama, Mittagong and at his work premises and home.
Following his first court appearance in December 2024, Mr Jones strongly denied the allegations.
“I have never indecently assaulted these people,” he said at the time.
“The law assumes I am not guilty, and I am not guilty.
“I am emphatic that I’ll be defending every charge before a jury in due course.”
Mr Jones’ matter will return to court next week.
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation/prosecutors-drop-one-charge-against-exshock-jock-alan-jones/news-story/4be10eb842250537d3034de37a9c296e
https://qresear.ch/?q=Alan+Jones
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d0bc64 No.24672948
>>24391111 (pb)
Grace Tame podcast sparks fury as Jewish leaders condemn ABC decision
JON MENDELSOHN and JAMES MADDEN - June 02, 2026
1/2
The ABC is facing criticism from Jewish leaders, politicians and even one of its own high-profile presenters over its decision to proceed with a podcast hosted by Grace Tame, just weeks after she dismissed the rape of Israeli women by Hamas terrorists as “propaganda”.
On Tuesday the ABC announced the controversial activist would host a four-part podcast, Autistic AF with Grace Tame, which will explore what life is like for autistic women and gender-diverse people in Australia.
It was first announced in November that Tame had been commissioned to work on the ABC’s podcast platform in 2026, but that was before she made a series of inflammatory remarks about the conflict in the Middle East.
In February, Tame led a chant of “From Gadigal to Gaza, globalise the intifada” at a pro-Palestine rally in Sydney, opposing a visit to Australia by Israeli President Isaac Herzog, whom she labelled a “war criminal”.
The following month, Tame told ABC Radio host Hamish Macdonald that reports of Israeli women being raped by Hamas terrorists on October 7 had been “debunked”.
Jewish leaders expressed outraged over the ABC’s decision to proceed with the Tame podcast, accusing the public broadcaster of a “profound lack of judgment”.
Australian Jewish Association chief Robert Gregory said he thought at first the ABC announcement was a joke.
“I simply could not believe Australia’s public broadcaster could be so tone deaf,” he said.
“This decision demonstrates a profound lack of judgment and disregard for the concerns of many Australians, particularly within the Jewish community. It reinforces the growing perception that ABC management is increasingly out of touch with the communities it is supposed to serve.”
Executive Council of Australian Jewry co-chief executive Alex Ryvchin told The Australian that the ABC’s decision to proceed with Ms Tame’s podcast, even after her widely-panned anti-Israel public statements, sent a message that such conduct carried no consequences and even brought financial rewards.
“It seems the ABC has determined that Grace Tame is fit for employment at public expense after screaming chants widely interpreted as calling for global attacks on Jews, and a radio interview in which she doubled down on her comments questioning the widespread pack rape and sexual torture committed by Hamas, which the terrorists themselves never denied,” he said.
“Everyone deserves a second chance but Tame has shown no remorse or regret whatsoever.”
(continued)
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d0bc64 No.24672952
YouTube embed. Click thumbnail to play.
>>24672948
2/2
ABC presenter Charlie Pickering said the decision to allow Tame’s podcast to proceed was “problematic”.
Referencing Tame’s comments about the intifada and the October 7, 2023, attacks, Pickering told Rebel News Australia on Tuesday: “I think, as a Jewish Australian, there’s a complete misunderstanding of a lot of the words that are said and what (the) true meanings of them are. A lot of people are using words and phrases that have meaning well beyond what they think they do.
“I think you could argue that a lot of people who jump on protest bandwagons are ignorant a lot of the time,” he said.
Liberal federal MP Sarah Henderson, the opposition spokesperson for communications, said the public broadcaster’s managing director, Hugh Marks, “must explain how this decision is consistent with the ABC’s editorial standards and statutory obligation to disseminate news and information impartially and accurately”.
“At a time when antisemitism is at record levels in Australia, the national broadcaster should be exercising the highest standards of judgment, not rewarding individuals who have undermined social cohesion and spread false information about one of the worst terrorist atrocities in modern history,” she said.
“Australians are entitled to know whether the ABC conducted any assessment of Ms Tame’s public statements and activism before offering her this role, and whether it considered the impact this appointment would have on public confidence and trust in the broadcaster.”
An ABC spokesperson said the taxpayer-funded broadcaster had been “working with Ms Tame on this series since late 2025”.
“The ABC rejects the views made by Grace Tame about October 7,” they said.
The Australian asked the ABC if any consideration had been given to scrapping the podcast in the wake of Tame’s comments about October 7 and her public plea to “globalise the intifada”, but the spokesperson did not respond.
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation/grace-tame-podcast-sparks-fury-as-jewish-leaders-condemn-abc-decision/news-story/5b1598876fa1629e169bf692e31eadbe
https://www.abc.net.au/listen/programs/ladies-we-need-to-talk
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k9r7FVJhH04
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d0bc64 No.24672960
>>24653832
>>24653835
Calls grow for notorious childcare pedophile to face justice in NSW
Pressure is building to extradite one of Australia’s most notorious daycare pedophiles to NSW to face alleged offences.
Will Paige and Suzan Giuliani - June 1, 2026
One of Australia’s worst pedophiles should face justice for alleged crimes against 23 children in NSW, according to survivors’ families and a major early learning services body, which want the former childcare worker extradited to stand trial.
Former childcare centre worker Ashley Paul Griffith was handed a life sentence in 2024 after pleading guilty to more than 300 child sexual offences against dozens of victims across Queensland and Italy over a period of almost two decades.
However Griffith has never stood trial in NSW, where he faces a further 180 charges against more than 20 children in Sydney’s inner west.
The family of an alleged victim in NSW told The Daily Telegraph that Griffith exploited his role in the state’s childcare system to prey on children, unimpeded for years.
“Seeing this monster finally brought back to face charges in our state will never undo the damage he has caused but we take some comfort in knowing he is locked away and unable to harm any more children,” the parent said.
The convicted pedophile is currently appealing his 27-year sentence for raping and abusing scores of children in Brisbane, arguing it is “excessive”.
NSW can seek to have prisoners transferred from another state on legal grounds to face charges but this cannot occur until Griffith’s appeal in Queensland is dealt with.
“We are just one of the families trying to pick up the pieces after the utter devastation caused by his heinous actions,” the parent said.
“We applaud the investigative teams at the Australian Federal Police and NSW Police for the very difficult but necessary work they did to stop him.”
As long ago as 2014, daycare predator Griffith allegedly abused young girls at a Sydney daycare centre but more than a decade later he has still not faced justice in NSW.
He is accused of horrific crimes in the state including 68 counts of sexual intercourse with a child under ten.
NSW Attorney General Michael Daley has sought and received agreement from the Queensland and Commonwealth attorney generals to extradite Griffith to NSW to face charges after his appeal in Queensland has concluded.
“The NSW Government is determined to do everything possible to ensure Griffiths faces trial in NSW as soon as possible,” a spokesman for Attorney General Michael Daley told the Telegraph.
Some of Griffith’s charges relate to Federal laws, meaning agreement is needed from both the Queensland and Federal governments to extradite him to NSW.
Marea Hickie, special counsel at Shine Lawyers, is acting for some of Griffith’s alleged victims and said the predator’s offending involved an extraordinary number of victims.
“It is essential that Griffith is prosecuted for the alleged crimes in NSW so that every survivor has some recognition of their ongoing suffering,” Ms Hickie told the Telegraph.
“Justice must be comprehensive and we hope it is swift to provide our clients with some minimal comfort and recognition of the ongoing impact on their everyday lives.”
Ms Hickie added: “Despite repeated recommendations and inquiries into childcare regulation, both Australia and NSW have continued in their failure to implement urgent measures to protect the lives of innocent children and their families.”
In an email seen by the Telegraph and sent to Attorney General Michael Daley, the Australian Childcare Alliance (ACA) NSW Chief Executive Chiang Lim also called for Griffith’s urgent extradition, labelling him “Australia’s worst pedophile”.
“We anxiously await the NSW Government’s announcement of this anticipated extradition as well as the beginning of the legal trial for his crimes,” he said in a letter.
The ACA, which represents over 1,600 privately owned early childhood care services, added that as part of NSW court proceedings, it expected “structural and systemic failures” that precipitated Griffith’s crimes to be identified.
“Moreover, we continue our expectations of culpable others (including those early childhood education and care services as well as their related approved providers) who have still not been criminally charged for negligence or being an accessory.”
On Thursday in Brisbane, the Court of Appeal reserved its decision in the appeal of Griffith, with a ruling to be made at a later, unspecified date.
https://www.couriermail.com.au/education/regions/new-south-wales/calls-grow-for-notorious-childcare-pedophile-to-face-justice-in-nsw/news-story/7ffe13f0869d7cfe53ebe1ba3d2ed349
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